Originally posted by TX_92_Notch
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Ruger American Ranch .300 Blackout
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Luckily our coop is virtually impossible for any 4 legged critter to enter once the doors are closed. The only thing getting in here would be a snake if it climbs the walls to the vented windows 6' above grade.Originally posted by krazy kris View PostThose possums will kill chickens as well. They will just eat the head though. I shot a possum in my coop a couple nights ago.
Get in line!Originally posted by GE View PostWhere are you at?
That would be great!Originally posted by Craizie View PostI’ve got a remote electric one somewhere. I’ll see if I can dig it out tonight.
I shined my flashlight across mine and the neighbor's yards last night and there were two coyote laying down, staring back at me from 200' away from the porch. I walked towards them and they didn't move until I was roughly 100' away. They just lazily walked off into the dense brush. Were I equipped, I could have easily shot one of them.
I'm ordering a Yankee Hill Nitro 30 suppressor from 'Musbrad2' today.
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I would consider them as useless employees. Did you know that the NFA does not require the system as it is set up? It only says that a $200 tax has to be paid and says nothing about the process. We should change it where you simply pay the $200 at point-of-sale like you do with sales tax.Originally posted by GE View PostNFA examiners are non essential employees, so the paperwork is just sitting there stacking up.Magnus, I am your father. You need to ask your mother about a man named Calvin Klein.
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Coyote, be damned.
We picked up two Great Pyrenees in late-April. They're roughly 4 months old now and growing fast. Both came from working parents on large 'ranch' homes. His parents work an 85 acre ranch and her parents work a 35 acre ranch. Both pups were around chickens, goats, cattle and horses from birth until we got them 9 or 11 weeks later. They've been with our goats, chickens and donkey since we brought them home.
Hopefully, these two are our solution to the chicken buffet for the local coyote population. Good timing, too, as we've got three pregnant goats and should have a bunch of baby goats around the time I'd consider the pups big enough to make a coyote think twice about jumping the fence.
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