Texas Hunting Forum

The Old Days

Posted By: cody

The Old Days - 11/05/18 10:55 PM

Remember the old days before feeders...before trail cams...before cell phones in the blind?

Killed a lot of deer wearing a maroon Wall’s coat and coveralls. Sure takes a lot of the excitement out of it with all the tech.
Posted By: SapperTitan

Re: The Old Days - 11/05/18 11:09 PM

Hunting is what you make it. You don’t have to use a feeder, camo, high powered rifle and scope, newest and greatest bow, game cameras, or anything else. Hunt the way you want to and if you don’t like it change it.
Posted By: Creekrunner

Re: The Old Days - 11/05/18 11:12 PM

I remember my dad buying two feeders at a yard sale. One was a contraption in 1/2 of a trash can. Wooden wheel inside with coffee cans you filled with corn and a timer moved the wheel and the coffee cans would dump through a hole. 'Don't remember if we ever got it to work. An old Mexican man that was like an uncle to me taught me how to put corn in glass bottles (like a Coke or Corona bottle) and the deer would paw at it and keep them there longer. I'm still gonna show that one to my grandson someday.

As far as clothing tech. I'm okay with some of it. Shivering to death has never been exciting to me. I don't know why.
Posted By: ddmm

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 01:43 AM

When I first started hunting with my uncle, they used wooden coke bottle crates to put the corn in. Squares were too small for the cattle to eat much out of. No windows on the blinds, so you better dress for the weather. Did a lot more walking, didn't have the ATV\UTV's running all over now days, and actually had fun doing it.
Posted By: LonestarCobra

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 02:04 AM

I still hunt that way, no feeders, my phone has no service, my last camera gave up several years ago, and I still kill my 2 deer a year out of the same blind I was hunting when I started in 1979. I enjoy the surprise of what shows up, and having to make that choice if it will be the best I will see this year not knowing what else lurks out there. There were a few years I fell victim to the tech and bought cameras, built feeders, and picked my deer out a month before the season. I lost interest and didn't even hunt a whitetail for a few years. When my son was 6, he got interested and I started going again. I decided then, that we would keep it old school and simple, and I wouldn't change a thing.
Posted By: skinnerback

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 02:19 AM

I actually miss the days when I didn't have a cell phone. No trail cameras, no feeders. Nobody bitching about what you or your kid shot. Lots of big deer killed but also plenty of deer that many would look down on now, on here. We fed the roads from a tailgate or by hand with corn dumped into barrels in the back of the truck from the silo. It was more fun to me not knowing what was going to stick it's head out of the brush. As a kid I dreamed about it and couldn't wait to get out there. Now I run lots of feeders, game cams, my phone never stops. It is cool to be able to communicate with the kids and other hunters during a hunt if you have service, but to me was more fun not knowing what was going on. I guess I miss the anticipation, and the days when deer hunting wasn't all about inches. Anyway.....
Posted By: dogcatcher

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 02:44 AM

We used to fill quart soda pop bottles with corn and about 3AM get up and take them to the stands, pouring out a little corn. Then came the PVC pipe feeders, like the hog pipes and up right PVC pipe feeders like chicken feeders. The up right pipe feeders would be empty if not filled up about after the evening hunt. But with the pipe version we would hand corn the area. The deer were quickly trained to go to those pipe feeders.

With the help of a student at TSTI's electronics section we made our first timer using a battery operated clock kit from the hobby shop. He taught me how to solder a capacitor in line with a battery etc. and wire all with a switch to the motor spinner. Used old windshield wiper motors for the motor and 12V car batter for power.

Clothes, my old Army fatigues served me well for decades. Still have some, but they "shrunk". Way back when, I would gather up my old overcoat with the liner, and crawl up under a cedar tree and pray a snake wasn't keeping me company. I don't miss those days, I like the dry warm blinds better than the old days.
Posted By: stxranchman

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 02:55 AM

We used the 12 oz wooden coke cases and also filled 32 oz 7-up or coke bottles with corn for feeders. The deer would roll the pop bottles around to get the corn out of them. Cattle could not figure it out. We took a 15 gallon grease barrel and made a free choice corn feeder after that. One of my first spin feeders was made from a 7 day oilfield well timer. Buddy was a ADT installer so he had the knowledge to make the rest of the timer and got me a used 12 volt battery to run the 12 volt fan motor. That was back in the early 80's. We wore the same clothes were wore for everyday. Heavier in the colder weather. We shot the first buck we saw and never had doe permits till the mid 70's. Still did not get many of them at that time.
Posted By: 68rustbucket

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 02:58 AM

Had a couple tree stands. Nailed 2x4 steps to the trunk, that would get you to the fork in the trunk. Then a small seat built in the fork, with a backrest. And a small rope to tie to rifle to haul it up after you were situated in the tree.
Posted By: skinnerback

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 03:05 AM

My oldest Son has been pretty much spoiled to box blinds with heaters, that's on me. I am tempted to put him in a tripod all year this year (whenever he has a day off), just to see if he will be able to freeze his azz off and still make the shot like I used to roflmao My 7 yr old Son, I will wait for another year or two. grin
Posted By: Walkabout

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 03:08 AM

Top of the line footwear was your broke down high top basket ball shoes spray painted camo black and brown. Were actually very comfortable and quiet. Just don't hunt near the cactus.
Posted By: skinnerback

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 03:16 AM

Originally Posted By: 68rustbucket
Had a couple tree stands. Nailed 2x4 steps to the trunk, that would get you to the fork in the trunk. Then a small seat built in the fork, with a backrest. And a small rope to tie to rifle to haul it up after you were situated in the tree.


Man I nailed many a 2x4 and later screw in pegs to trees, with only a couple of 2x4's nailed for a seat. The backrest was the tree, I'm pretty sure that would kill my back & backside now roflmao I always climbed with my rifle on my shoulder w/sling. The first time I used a rope to lift/lower my rifle it felt pretty weird to me lol.
Posted By: LandPirate

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 03:22 AM

I remember the days before feeders too. Remember sitting for hours on end and not seeing deer, or very few. I like deer hunting where I actually get to watch deer. Or at least have them within a reasonable distance in case I decide to shoot one.
Posted By: txtrophy85

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 04:00 AM

Grew up hunting in old plywood box stands, tripods, lock on stands and on the ground next to trees. Had 80’s model 4 wheeler or old jeep. No phones but read books or magazines to pass the time. Sometimes we had feeders sometimes we just spread corn on the ground. Sometimes feeders worked sometimes they didn’t.

Now have much better feeders, much bigger plywood blinds, much better vehicles. Also much better deer on average. More bucks to look at. Better Binos, better rifles and better scopes. Better clothing, boots, knives, etc.


None of it bothers me.


Posted By: Texas Dan

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 05:01 AM

While I enjoy hunting my food plot, I make it a point every season to pull out the deer hunting knowledge that was passed down to me from men who are long since gone. I feel I owe it to both them and the sport, and I always make it a point to start each season that way. I took a spike Saturday morning while hunting with an open-sighted 30-30 in a stand that was near a fence crossing on a tract that with no feeers or food plots. It does, however, have plenty of cows roaming it.

Posted By: pigplinker

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 10:36 AM

I remember freezing my arse off while wearing two pair of jeans, socks, maybe I was lucking and had a pair of long johns. I look back on it and think of my father, uncle, and grandfather that helped teach me when they could. I DON'T MISS freezing my Arse off. I think myself as well as others have gotten lazy with our hunting. My trip to Colorado this year helped wake me up to my skills now or lack of.

I have to admit my office chair in my box stand make a great place to nap. sleep2 The deer might hear me, but they can't see me cause I'm camo'ed. I still would rather be out in a stand than doing pretty much anything else. Especially now that my grand children are getting old enough to shoot the deer. I enjoy getting to supervise the cleaning. texas
Posted By: Stub

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 11:56 AM

There are things about the old days that I miss and things that I don't.

Stands versus fork of a tree. I also remember fondly (most of the times) sitting in the fork of tree. I miss the close encounters with deer right below you or various birds landing right above you, nice days with a cool breeze in your face and unblocked views. I do not miss freezing my arse off or having to squirm around to get blood circulating in your butt area again.

Feeders and food plots. Glad I have them, do not miss the days of sometimes not seeing any deer. I also believe they help sustain a larger deer population with the extra food.

Game cameras for the most part like them, neat to see what is coming around when you are not, small down side is it takes away some of the surprise or hunting experience if you know what is coming and some cases when.

Cell phones for the most part I like them so you know who is where and what is going on, small down side is kind of miss everyone driving around to see who shot what and saying hi in person for the more often.

Trailer versus camping on nice evenings I sometimes miss it, for the most part I love my Butt Hut!

Good luck everyone.
Posted By: Ranch Dog

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 12:28 PM

I think about the changes from my start in the early to mid-sixties all the time. Some of it better, some of it not.
  • Leases were for as long as you wanted them without written contracts.
  • There were a lot more invites given or extended.
  • A feeder was an empty wooden coke box. You didn't use them if there was javelina on your place. Didn't know what a feral hog was other than up in the Hill Country, one gave Old Yeller rabies.
  • In South Texas, you wore your pajamas under your blue jeans. Only adults had thermals, and they always told you that the PJs were a bit better.
  • An Aladdin thermos was your best friend. If you were old enough to hunt, you learned that you were old enough to drink coffee.
  • Only Wage-Earning adults had new rifles. I was around a lot of hunters and did not know an adult with more than one deer rifle.
  • Hunting Shows were different; they were not a marketing event. You went to a theater on a weekday night and watched reel after reel of hunting films with a host MC'ing the event. I remember a fellow that was Wally or Walt, his hunting shows were the best. Always at the Ayer's Theater in Corpus Christi every year leading up to a hunting season.
  • The County Commissioners set the hunting season dates, not TPWD. In some ways, this was better as locals and leaseholders could go to a meeting and make an impact. It also made for some interesting season dates, but typically the South Texas counties went from November 15th Through December 31st. They didn't worry about starting on a Saturday and ending on a Sunday, that came with TPWD. I do remember that McMullen County decided to go November 1st through December 15th, that was different at the time.
  • You saw more cars than trucks at a camp. Trucks in the sixties were a luxury for a family. A truck was a truck then, nothing near what they are today. My dad had a Corvair; the rear wheel drive was outstanding on the sand sheet. My dad couldn't wait for me to drive. At fourteen, he figured I was responsible enough, so we went to a junk yard and bought a trunk. Paid to have it hauled home and put in the garage. It took a year to rebuild, but it looked new. At 15, he figured I was good to go without a license and didn't have a problem with me going hunting by myself. He lives on my ranch, 89 years old, and we laugh about that now. He insists I was born old and responsible.
  • On our drive from Corpus to our Zapata County lease, you never saw a game fence; I didn't even know what that was. It's the opposite now.
  • Because of the above, contests like the Muy Grande in Freer meant more to me as a kid. It meant that you never knew what was going to step out of the brush.
  • The same with game cams as above, there is little surprise left. Now, you are more surprised when a specific deer doesn't show up.
  • Finally, I remembered hunters talking around a fire, not piddling with their phone.
Posted By: activescrape

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 02:00 PM

I do miss the old days. Every time you got in a stand you could fantasize about what might show up, because you had no idea what was out there. No cameras, no phones. When asked if you got a buck, it was answered by how many points he had. If you could say 8, you were the man. Deer camp was around a campfire where everyone would tell the stories of everything they saw and heard in their hunt. Cooking was on the fire too.There weren't any pigs. There weren't any high fences. I own land in San Saba county that has been in the family since 1932 and it is depressing how chopped up that country is now with high fences. It's unnatural looking to drive for miles on a dirt road with high fences on both sides. Doesn't look rural anymore like that. I know I'll get blowback for this post, I just liked it better when everything was native and wild and free.
Posted By: unclebubba

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 02:18 PM

I still hunt that way...sometimes. At our place in OK, there are no feeders, no cameras. We have a 10x20 shack that we sleep in, and we cook dinner over the campfire. If you want to know what deer have been seen, you have to ask Jones or Ishmael, because they are up there more often than we are. I love hunting up there...Man, Thanksgiving can't get here fast enough!!!
Posted By: Western

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 02:21 PM

Times change. I doubt there would be one American indian that would turn down a custom 1000 yard rifle, heated stand, watching a feeder to fill his tipi, he would likely keep the rituals, but he wasn't stupid.

Hunting is big bidness and hunters have had brilliant marketing pushed on them, maybe that is our new ritual, more the accumulation of "stuff" vs the need for it. I think some change mirrors the general purpose as well, meat and survival vs big horns, again, marketing.

I hunt like the few in my family taught me (uncles and grandad), big horns are great, but the "whole package" is what I like most. My whole outfits probably cost less than a hunerd, no $200 dollar britches just to sit in a box, or even hunt the high country. Only real change is what you allow.
Posted By: gary roberson

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 02:45 PM

I miss the old days when hunting was simpler. Most all my blinds were a few boards nailed in the fork of a tree or a ground blind made from stacking logs or a simple brush blind. We had trucks on the ranch but most of the hunters drove their company cars down from San Antonio and that was their only transportation on the ranch. If they killed a deer, the field dressed carcass was tied across the hood, trunk or roof for the ride back to the city.
There were no feeders so you would hand feed senderos or natural opening along trails. We had screw worms so deer populations were extremely low. If you saw a buck, you shot it and I never heard anyone talk of management.
Most of the hunting population were better hunters and woodsmen as most were raised on farms and ranches and grew up hunting.
Adios,
Gary
Posted By: txtrophy85

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 03:14 PM

I remember the days of cotton long johns, two pairs of cotton socks, suede boots and freezing every single time you sat. Don’t miss that at all

I do miss the stories and characters that you would see around the camp.



Someone mentioned hunters owning multiple rifles. I too only knew maybe a few people who had more than
1 or 2 centerfire guns.
Posted By: Jimbo

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 03:44 PM

As a teen I shot my first buck sitting inside a brush blind perched on a fallen log.
My second was from a cedar post from an old fence, placed in a cedar tree between two forked branches.
All my other blinds were boards nailed to a tree trunk, and a seat nailed to the fork of the tree.
Dressing warm was the ticket, and a hand warmer was a luxury if I could find it.
Didn't hunt out of a box blind until my late 20's.
Only thing I carried into the woods was my unscoped rifle, a pocket full of cartridges, a knife on my belt, and depending on where I was sitting I would take along binoculars.
Cell phones were non existent, and all phones were black with a dial, and receiver attached with a curly cord.
Almost all the rural gas stations carried 30-30, 30-06, .308, and .243 and most of the others were odd balls covered with a layer of dust.
People drove through town with the deer strapped across the hood, or hanging out of the back of the trunk or tailgate, parked at the gas station or BBQ joint.
Camo was a rare sighting and most wore the red and black plaid shirts and Elmer Fudd caps if you were a city slicker, or in the case of the locals, just plain old jeans, blue jean jacket and cowboy hat.
Posted By: hook_n_line

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 03:57 PM

I remember hunting with a .303 british, deer stand was a couple pieces of 2x4 and small piece of plywood made into a lean-to and the feeder was an old garbage can with a mop stick to block the hole. You knew when a deer was there because they would bump that mopstick for the corn to fall out. Oh how things have changed.
Posted By: snake oil

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 04:07 PM

Sling a 2X4 in a tree if it stuck we called it a stand. Bury an old coke case and fill it with corn. Bow stand we got an old cultivator seat and a 2' piece of 3/4" all thread and nutted the seat at top and bottom. Used a 3/4" brace and bit to bore a hole in a horizontal limb close enough to the trunk( Live Oak) to lean back against and we had our bow stand...We used a third nut on the all thread to set the height of the seat and feet went on the limb, really comfy.
Posted By: stxranchman

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 04:18 PM

I can remember back in the early 60's when spikes and does were not legal to kill. It was a time when bucks were killed and first thing someone asked was how much it weighed, then they might ask about how many points it had or how wide was it. It was also a time when the first day of deer season started on a weekday and there was no school that day. Phones were still new at this time and many did not have one in their home. You answered on your number of rings. In many rural areas it was a party line that was shared with several other farms or ranches. Everyone on the party line listened to your phone calls and you did to theirs. It was a form of social media back then. grin
Posted By: titan2232

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 06:04 PM

Times sure have changed and so has the deer numbers.

I was thinking "is this really hunting" as my son and I watched 40+ deer Saturday morning at various locations (three feeders in a 300 yard span and the 400 yard road I corned on the way in)

Sitting in my Ranch King blind texting my wife who was back at camp on WiFi:

Wife: Seeing anything?
Me: Too many to count
Wife: Any bucks?
Me: Yea 22 bucks last count
Wife: Any shooters for Connor's first deer?
Me: 3 cull 8 points for sure, but the season is young


Learned a few things. It's hard to judge age and/or score with so many targets to look at
Posted By: Ranch Dog

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 09:04 PM

Great memories guys. With hunter numbers decreasing, maybe the activity does not do that anymore; make memories, and that is why so many aren't continuing. The magic might be gone. It does seem that it is a bit competitive now; you see it on our forum. It seems that many have to outdo everything; feed, shoot, score, age, etc. It seems that if you shoot a deer with a Fudd gun just because you haven't tasted gravy on a slice of skillet fried backstrap for a year, something is wrong with you.
Posted By: txtrophy85

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 09:22 PM

to me the camp experience is what I miss the most.


Trust me, after hunting in western states humping it and not seeing very much game coming home, sitting in a box blind and seeing lots of deer at a feeder is welcome. But the camp experience has been sacrificed for work schedules, school sports, deadlines and commitments. ( ok I stole that from a Bob Seger song) I miss a group of guys getting together, around a fire, having a few drinks and telling stories. then you go out and hunt and try and kill a big deer or a cull.


That kind of experience just isn't a common anymore
Posted By: Bbear

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 10:18 PM

It's the one's that are gone that I miss the most;
Uncle JB - took me on my first deer hunt with dogs in Mississippi. He would let everyone else get up at (in his words) "the butt-crack of dawn" and head to their stands. About sunrise, he figured the dogs were being let loose and we'd load up in an old jeep and drive past the other hunters to go to our stands.
Uncle Bill - taught me enough about hunting mule deer and elk in Idaho. Always took me out fishing and taught me how to fly fish.
Uncle Russell - taught me the fine points on fly fishing and was quite the hunter himself. I don't think his family ever went a year without at least two mule deer and/or an elk.
Finally, Dad - got me hooked on shooting 22's when I was 3. Took me hunting that year and the next. I got to carry a gun on my first hunt when I was just turned 5 (season opened on a Wednesday then). and I shot a little doe with that 30 carbine.

I'd love to have all of those men and more sit around a campfire one more time. I think I'd happily give up all but one of my guns to experience that.
Posted By: Pitchfork Predator

Re: The Old Days - 11/06/18 10:41 PM

While I would not change the early days and memory of freezing on a two by four on a tree limb, never seeing deer I would never go back. Better hunting I like my Kubota and my travel trailer double slide.
Posted By: dawgkllr

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 03:50 PM

I can remember back in the 60's - 70's sitting on the side of a big hill behind rocks stacked for concealment in Palo Pinto County outside of Gordon. My dad loved long range hunting and would sit for hours looking thru binoculars for deer. My first deer, a doe was taken in a canyon below one of those hills. Deer camp was always something special to me. We had an old metal shack with dirt floor and a pot belly stove to heat it. Dads hunting buddy had two kids who were always there with us and us kids were free to run and explore the woods around camp. Our blinds were the same as yalls, a couple of 2x4's nailed in the crotch of a tree except for when one of the hunters figured out how to haul an old, striped out Renault car up in a couple of trees and blocked it into place. We took a lot of deer off of that place but more importantly we made a lot of memories!
Posted By: Triplesnake

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 03:53 PM

I grew up hunting on the east coast. Nobody baited with corn but some guys ran dogs. If you heard dogs running, you always tried to get in front of them, even if they weren't your group's dogs. Our "lease" consisted of paper company land where you paid like $10 and could hunt all of the land that company held in the whole state. We'd hunt for a long weekend and could count the number of deer we saw on one hand sometimes, and if someone actually killed a deer it was big deal. We never had stands. We'd usually pick a likely spot and get up under a bush or just sit against a tree, or maybe build a brush blind. Sometimes I'd get board and just walk for miles on the logging roads, not knowing that I was moving too fast and out in the open to really see any deer doing that, but it was better then freezing my butt off sitting on the ground. I remember one spot that was the ruins of an old farm house. the only thing left standing was the chimney. My brother and I got so cold we built a fire in it late one morning to warm up and that old chimney still pulled up the smoke. We went by that spot once when we were out scouting and there were still iris flowers growing there, left over from someone's old flower garden. Those are some cool memories from a different time and different hunting, I kind of miss it, but I also enjoy seeing more deer!
Posted By: Texas Dan

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 05:12 PM

Perhaps the best memory of the old days is that no one ever thought of an animal as being “their deer”, much less having gone so far as to give a deer a name.
Posted By: Palehorse

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 05:46 PM

I grew up hunting east Texas in the early 70's. There weren't a lot of deer around there then. There were a few seasons that I never saw a single deer that was legal to shoot. I don't miss those days.
Posted By: Hunter Daddy

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 07:32 PM

I started hunting deer in 1980 at 12 years old. To get around the ranch, we had a 1972 1 ton Datsun pickup truck, standard shift. I remember pushing that truck with the help of Dad and uncles just to get down the wet, muddy roads. If it didn't start then you had to "pop" the clutch. We did have the "Weaver" scopes that were only 4 power so we didn't shoot past 200 yards. Cold, rotten deer blinds with broken ladders. And, back then, everyone worked and had jobs and family life so they could only come out maybe 4 weekends all season! Every stand either had 1 feeder only no no feeders. Now, everything is exactly opposite!
Posted By: maximum

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 08:18 PM

Originally Posted By: txtrophy85

. . .Someone mentioned hunters owning multiple rifles. I too only knew maybe a few people who had more than
1 or 2 centerfire guns.


there was one old guy i remember, bought a pawn shop rifle of some kind every august-september, sighted it in,
used it for the season to kill his one buck that you were allowed, then sell it right back.
did it every year and got his one allotted deer every year without spending several thousand and change to do it.
Posted By: maximum

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 08:19 PM

one other- does anybody walk to their hunting spot anymore?
Posted By: txtrophy85

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 08:28 PM

Originally Posted By: maximum
one other- does anybody walk to their hunting spot anymore?


I’m gonna have to tonite because the wife will have the buggy.


I’ve found walking to the blind spooks far more deer than driving.
Posted By: redchevy

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 10:53 PM

Originally Posted By: maximum
one other- does anybody walk to their hunting spot anymore?


We walk everywhere for hunting.

I guess im too young for the "good old days" I started hunting when I was 10. We had crank up timed feeders and box blinds. The majority of the hunting we do is still similar, but I also enjoy sitting tripods over trails and hand corn, bush blinds etc. I used to walk the edges of the corn fields by my grandparents house and pick up corn cobs the combines missed and save them for deer season.
Posted By: PMK

Re: The Old Days - 11/07/18 11:33 PM

I grew up hunting very old school as none of these modern conveniences were dreamed up that we were aware of. Our stands were hollowed out brush piles, a few boards nailed into a tree with a flimsy ladder for climbing, there were no such thing as feeders other than planting food plots or tossing out some corn somewhere we could see. It was a harder time hunting but still enjoyable to me.

Over time, make shift feeders using a 5 gallon oil bucket with a hole drilled in the bottom with a sawed off broom handle passing thru the hole with a stiff wire cut off coat hanger inside, usually attached a cedar branch to the broom handle so the wind would blow allowing some corn to come out (the deer figured this out and could empty it in 10 minutes) Or the old wooden coke crates with pieces of rebar driven into the ground to keep the cows/hogs from moving, filled with corn Or the old 1 quart glass coke bottles filled with corn that the deer would paw at to sling some corn out (but once they figured it out, they got to breaking the necks off the bottles leaving shards of glass).

Moving on a few more years out came the photo eye 5 gallon bucket feeders that would go off about 30 minutes after first light (or sunup?), then again 8 hour later. These didn't work too well on heavily overcast days and the coons figure them out pretty quickly too. We started seeing plywood blinds being made/sold, so we built a few of those too, the plexiglass sliding windows were the bomb.

Feeders became more readily available in various sizes up to 55 gallon barrels up on legs instead of hanging out of a tree. Then more advanced timers where you could set multiple settings and durations, HCR were the first of these that I recall and were built in my hometown, so really easy access but were kinda pricey relatively speaking.

Throughout the years, there are more and more advancements (and gimmicks) that become available and the price continues to climb. And most are willing to pay for the nicer things and latest technology to make it easier (maybe?).


when I started a lease was a set fee for the use of the property and you could typically put as many hunters on it that you wanted to even out the price, the deer were a nuisance to the landowner taking food away from their livestock. I still recall my dad had 10-12 buddies that had hunted together for years before I was born, they stuck together from lease to lease when they found something bigger or better. Each of the paid hunters were allowed to bring their immediate family (wife & kids) out to hunt after opening weekend (which used to be the first Sat. after Nov. 16). Landowners provided doe tags and if it had antlers, shoot it because of the limited number of doe tags provided ... the landowners were protecting the baby producers mentality. The price of a lease was like a $1 per acre, split between paid hunters. Yes this was 50 plus years ago, but also a different mindset and much simpler time, providing food for the family. No one asked what the score was, but how wide and how many points, field dressed weight if a really big deer.

times have changes, some for good, some not so much. We typically see much bigger deer where the herd is managed properly, fed properly and let them grow up. I've been practicing this for close to 30 years now ... but likewise, the prices have gone up exponentially.

main thing is do what you like, have fun, teach someone new to love the outdoors and safety in hunting. Not every scenario fits us all, so no need to slam someone if they do something different than you ...

sorry for rambling, this has been over several hours between meetings when I have a few minutes and something new popped into my head.
Posted By: activescrape

Re: The Old Days - 11/08/18 02:09 AM

Originally Posted By: maximum
one other- does anybody walk to their hunting spot anymore?

All of us do. Part of the adventure.
Posted By: roughneck266

Re: The Old Days - 11/08/18 02:39 AM

Same here, although I am considering a bicycle. Mainly so it will be a bit quieter than my big ol feet.
Posted By: Flashprism

Re: The Old Days - 11/08/18 12:44 PM

Started hunting in 1960 at 12. I remember sleepless nights or the dreams of shooting my limit of rabbits and or pheasants. My dad and my uncle John wre my mentors and i’d Give anything to sit at the fire with them again and listen to the stories that the dreams wre made of. Deer camp in the Catskills of NY state with cabin filled with smoke from the fire place and those cigars floating above the poker table the awesome site of those bucks hanging outside the cabin the day after the opener Sure miss that time in my life
Posted By: activescrape

Re: The Old Days - 11/08/18 02:06 PM

Originally Posted By: Flashprism
Started hunting in 1960 at 12. I remember sleepless nights or the dreams of shooting my limit of rabbits and or pheasants. My dad and my uncle John wre my mentors and i’d Give anything to sit at the fire with them again and listen to the stories that the dreams wre made of. Deer camp in the Catskills of NY state with cabin filled with smoke from the fire place and those cigars floating above the poker table the awesome site of those bucks hanging outside the cabin the day after the opener Sure miss that time in my life

I see you spend time near Dickens. I love that country up there. Had lots of good quail hunts up there years ago.
Posted By: WILLIED72

Re: The Old Days - 11/08/18 02:31 PM

Man..Takes me back to a better day..late 60's my brothers would take me with them to their lease in Ozona 10k place..they paid $1.00 an acre..NO camo..just blue jeans..coveralls..open sight 30/30..no feeders..etc..greatness!
Posted By: Flashprism

Re: The Old Days - 11/08/18 08:04 PM

Activescrape my place is 6 miles north east of Dickens and I also love it here. Been here since 2011 and quail were scarce until 2015 when they exploded last year and this has seen a drastic reduction. Overall I am blessed to have such a place to finishout my tour on this wonderful earth!!!!!!!
Posted By: TiggerV

Re: The Old Days - 11/08/18 09:01 PM

I remember a lot of these "good old day" things also. And a lot of them are still true. What I wonder is if everyone misses them so much, why not still do them? Miss sitting on a log? Go sit on a log!!! Build that brush blind!!!! Miss not knowing what if any thing will poke it's head out? Quit using the game camera!! Miss sleeping in a tent or the back of a truck?? You still can!!!! You had to build your own feeder or nor use one??? YOU STILL CAN!!!!

Most of the box blinds on our place are plywood and we build them ourselves. Yes, we use feeders, and it is by choice.

Hunting is one of those sports where you can get as advanced or stay as basic as you want. I personally use a good mix of new and old. I am going to be sitting in a homebuilt box blind this weekend overlooking a top of the line BossBuck feeder. I will be hunting with a 100+ Savage 99 in .303 Savage with iron sites.

On the other hand, I took a deer during Archery Season with a compound crossbow shooting close to 370 FPS.

Don't just reminisce. Go back and enjoy. Leave the phone in the vehicle. Sit around the fire instead of the TV.
Posted By: Eastwood

Re: The Old Days - 11/08/18 09:36 PM

I remember we used to use the Sweeney clock timers that you put pins in the holes when you wanted the feeder to go off. Also you could stand under the feeder and listen for the tick-tock to make sure your timer was working.
Posted By: activescrape

Re: The Old Days - 11/08/18 11:54 PM


Originally Posted by Flashprism
Activescrape my place is 6 miles north east of Dickens and I also love it here. Been here since 2011 and quail were scarce until 2015 when they exploded last year and this has seen a drastic reduction. Overall I am blessed to have such a place to finishout my tour on this wonderful earth!!!!!!!

We used to get a mix of bobs and blues there. We were straight east of town on the east edge of that first canyon. Thousand acres or so. Dr. Hendon owned it and I'm friends with one of his sons. Always wanted to hunt deer there but you know how life is, just never happened. They sold the ranch a long time ago. My wife is from Floyd county and we would go through Seymour, Guthrie, Benjamin, Dickens and up to Roaring Springs across to Dougherty to get to the farm. Always saw lots of game on the way, there were still antelope on the 6666 then, don't know if they are still there though. Glory days of pheasant, duck, gees, sandhill cranes, cottontails, quail and dove. Man I miss all that.
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