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#1 | |
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Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: OK
Posts: 153
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Quote:
I once read a story about an Indian youth being taught to hunt by an elder. They were watching deer that would move into a meadow each morning to feed. One young buck was lame so it was decided to take him. The youth had to watch him daily on his going about the meadow. They noticed each morning he paused at the same location on the edge of the meadow to scan the area for predators. It was decided the youth would be in the tree he paused under for a surprise attack the next morning. All went as planned, but the youth found that after watching the deer for many days and learning his habits, he felt a kinship, and taking his life was extremely emotional for him. The elder said that when the youth could feel this compassion for every living thing, he will have learned the great truth. We are all one. How many people would eat meat if they had to actually hunt and kill it? I've always wondered if I could - I have never hunted, but in survival mode, things change I presume. I think that it's WAY more ethical than factory farming and hellish slaughterhouses for sure. Peace. |
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#2 |
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Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: OK
Posts: 153
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Great Thanks Sol,
I'll be trying this out, got the materials laying about and it does sound like fun-I can even picture a spot for the trap in a bend shaded by trees down at the river. It would be nice to get a little mess of fresh fish before it gets too cold around here. |
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#3 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 599
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Quote:
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#4 |
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Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: In a farmland, Trondheim, Norway.
Posts: 17
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Hey Sol, very nice thread you posted! Such survival skills are always very important. I will try this out too one day. What would have come in handy is perhaps an unpermanent opening modification, to invite either bigger or smaller fishes into the trap. But I see the positive sides of having a medium opening! That way the small fishes could grow up and the largest reproduce themselves [when the time is ready]. Perhaps one could try different openings now and then, but not empty the river completely. Only if one had very big hunger...
Those interested in survival should really join our survival group with the fancy name "Dark side of the Moon"! See my profile if uncertain. Spiritual, as well as physical survival will be a sure way for "success" :] -Eq |
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#5 |
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Banned
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 599
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Hi equalitor.
reason for a medium sized opening is that small fish need to escape, grow and reproduce so we can have catches year after year. Large fish that will possibly eat all the other fish in there will not want to go into such a small space. medium? thats lunch ![]() But good point, and yes of course you can scale it upwards or downwards - make a small scale version for great live bait for your heavy lines. |
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#6 |
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Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: NZ
Posts: 11
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This fish trap looks very much like a traditional Maori "hinaki" or eel trap still widely used today, originally was a conical shaped basket weaved from flax.
Nice1 Sol Best regards |
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#7 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 158
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Quote:
Big fish lay more eggs and produce more offspring. It is wise to take what you need, not more. Take fishy from different size, different year of birth. In this case the stock will renew itself in a good way. Sometimes small fishies like to put their sperm on the eggs of BIG woman. The can do so because they are small and dont pose a threat to them big males. Who told you fish weren't smart? Its pretty difficult to explain it but if you take only the big ones the rest of the population will start to reproduce earlier and the offspring will be smaller. If you do so for many years the stock will eventually collapse. Some peoples call it survival-evolution. If you want to catch shrimp a simple way to do it goes as follows. Take a good handful of small branches and tie, in the middle, them together with a piece of rope. Not to fast, not to loose. Put a small stone in it so it will sink to the bottom. As bait you can put in some meat or worms. Shrimp like these places to hide in and eat. Throw it in the water and check it every day, renew the bait and try different ones. You never now what the shrimpies like. If you pull it out dont be to slow, shrimps are VERY fast, dont do it to fast, shrimps belong in the water not in the trees. Another way to do it is with a strong plastic bottle. Saw of the bottleneck a glue it upside down back in the bottle. Then saw off the bottom and make it that way you open en close it at will. Punch (or heat up a nail) holes in the bottle so the fresh water can circulate. Put some rope and bait on/it and throw it in the water and wait. If you have enough bottles you can make a string. You would be suprised of the amount of shrimps you can catch this way. Make sure the opening of the bottles is big enough for the species you want to catch. Even fishy will swim in to it if the opening is wide enough. Good fishing to you all. Love, Luck and Light to you all |
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#8 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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thanks sunnyrap.......for this information.....it makes alot of sense......
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#9 |
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Banned
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 158
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Check this link.
Chapter 8, page 26 and 27. The rest is also good stuff http://www.equipped.com/fm21-76.htm |
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#10 |
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Banned
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 599
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All survival resources are good things to have. However, I cannot urge you strongly enough to get some 'hands on' time.
Find a sympathetic land owner, and ask to do some 'wild camping' on his land. I have done this a few times on the estates around the Highlands. Most just ask that you don't shoot anything and if you make a fire, be responsible for it. |
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