Martin Ent Inc wrote: Large family, and no one hunts where we do believe me 25+ years and ain't seen a soul.
And we are not that easy to get too neighbor is a good guy others will bolt.
It's not so much who hunts where you are as it is where does the game travel? And even if no one is hunting there now doesn't mean they wouldn't be if they were hungry enough.
Good you have a good neighbor, a good neighbor is worth his weight in ammo.
I'm still worried about your grub though.
rofllol I don't go for too much dried crap, we grow alot, harvest wild alot, and when I tell ya no one hunts where we do it's cause the game is always there and it is a job geting them out. Luckily I have BOYs. There will not be alot of people heading into the wild as they are not used to providing for themselves they will seek city freebees, scavange or wait on FEMA to feed them.
MARTIN - are all of you on dope......well.......we are in Park county. Pardon the question - or are all of you at JJs at 2:00 PM to pass the dole for booze.
HAHAHA You're all sitting around planning how you're going to survive the end of the world. Good luck with that. I think I'll live my life now and not waste it planning on an improbable disaster.
Martin Ent Inc wrote: and delta is a whack job for sure NO cookies for you.
No beans, either!
For the record, I am not sitting around waiting for some "unspecified disaster". I've lived my life in a way that I would be reasonably prepared in good times and bad. Stuff happens, and no one really knows when or where it will. Being reasonably self-sufficient is common sense.
I will say though, that when I look at what is going down in this world, the odds of things really going to hell have never been higher in my lifetime. And i wouldn't count on FEMA coming to the rescue when it does.
People who plan on hunting to fill the larder? When the golden horde from Denver comes up here, even if only 100K make it up 285 on foot, they will empty the forests of game pretty quickly. Ever see a game drive, where 100 people walk through an area driving wildlife in front of them? They can empty out the terrain fast. Game populations took a massive hit during the Great Depression, when game laws weren't as important as empty bellies.
Thomas Sowell: There are no solutions, just trade-offs.