Jump to content
308AR.com Community
  • Visit Aero Precision
  • Visit Brownells
  • Visit EuroOptic
  • Visit Site
  • Visit Beachin Tactical
  • Visit Rainier Arms
  • Visit Ballistic Advantage
  • Visit Palmetto State Armory
  • Visit Cabelas
  • Visit Sportsmans Guide

Magwa

Specialist
  • Posts

    4,801
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Magwa

  1. Well do ya? I have been using them again and forgot how convienent they are .... do you like them or no?
  2. There are many contributions that Native Americans have made to all the wars we have fought because they still love their country, that is one thing that will never change yet you seldom hear anything about NA's in the service but we were always there, we have been fighting since 1492.... the original Homeland Security. Laura mentioned the Navajo Code Talkers in World War II and that recognition for their help in winning the war was a long time coming. Since their recognition, public interest in these code talker-heroes has been high. But did you know that Veterans from many different tribes served as code talkers? According to the Code Talkers Recognition Act, the first reported use of code talkers was on October 17, 1918, during World War I when the Choctaw helped defeat German forces in Europe. On December 7, 1941, the U.S. Army called on the Comanche to develop a code based on their language. During World War II, all of these tribes contributed to the Allied efforts through the use of their Native tongues: Assiniboine, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Chippewa/Oneida, Choctaw, Comanche, Cree, Crow, Hopi, Kiowa, Menominee, Meskwaki, Mississauga, Muscogee, Navajo, Osage, Pawnee, Sac and Fox, Seminole, and Sioux. Clarence Wolf Guts was one of 11 Sioux code talkers from South Dakota. Originally from the Pine Ridge Reservation, he served in the U.S. Army and helped develop a phonetic alphabet based on Lakota that was later used to develop a Lakota code. Reportedly, when the World Trade Towers fell on September 11, 2001, Clarence asked his son to call the DoD to see if the United States needed his code talking abilities to find Osama Bin Laden. Then in his 70s, Clarence “was still being patriotic.” Just recently, the Arizona state legislature also recognized the Hopi code talkers. The families of the 10 Hopi code talkers were recognized and honored for their service during World War II in the U.S. Army and the U.S. Air Corps. Like many tribes, the Hopi have served in World War II, the Korean Conflict, the Vietnam War, and the war in Iraq. This news interview with U.S. Marine Joe Vandever, Sr., a Navajo code talker, illustrates how the Navajo language was applied to create an unbreakable code, and how Joe helped deliver the code from 3 battleships. This video is one of many on YouTube honoring the Navajo code talkers. We appreciate the honor with which Native American veterans serve this country. The code talker success is yet one more mark of the ingenuity and resilience that has characterized the tribes for centuries. - See more at: http://blog.nrcprograms.org/american-indian-veterans-code-talkers/#sthash.zdTSYMOh.dpuf
  3. Magwa

    freezer meat... :)

    LMAO no Chit they are a bugger to see even when they are standing right in front of you .....
  4. Have fun , be safe bring meat home with or without horns who cares.....
  5. 66 ? Holy crap you are a teeny bopper I was born in 1950! now I am just now starting to get old.... :)
  6. Thank you to all those who have fought for this country and a special shout out to all the NA's who have given so much for so long... thank you one and all...
  7. Magwa

    Football

    Got to love them Hawks...... wife and I used to go to a game now and then I watched them when Zorn to largent was the bomb! they have finnaly arrived...
  8. Yeah I like having options too and if they are sewn on that option is gone..... I have narrowed it down for me to tac tailor or BDS just have not settles on the final configuration..... still have to figure out where to put a pistol as a drop leg design will not work in this country you would be dragging your pistol through the brush and water constantly....
  9. Also important prefered pistol location?
  10. This is a great thread and you guys are great for sharing your information, and you have the idea of what I am looking for. I use a Vickers two point sling it is the best way I have found to carry a 10 lb rifle and not be fatigued. so with that in mind my rifle kinda hangs from my right shoulder to my left hip accross my body ,so the middle of the chest rig would need to be kinda sparse in that area or have a flap of some kind that would keep the rifle from rubbing on any plastic buckles etc I have found it to be noisy in that way but I 100% agree with 98 that a mag carrier can also be a radio carrier or a capri sun carrier etc. I will look at every link you guys have posted and see what i can find I know hunting wise is not much different than SHTF wise so I think it is a good idea to find a rig that will and can be used for both because one I do all the time and the other I hope I never have to do... I went to that other thread and the picture of 98's FDE chest rig and belt is a perfect combination for both situation all I would need on 98's is a chest pouch for binos and a couple of small side pouches for radio knife ,rope etc also on that page was Rsquared's rig and it looks also great in that it has the 5,56 mag pouches on the left side where I like them and has the chest pouch for binos or radio or whatever and the option for body armour is on both of them.......are both those setups still being made?
  11. I was sitting here thinking a dangerous habit i admit when it struck me , we need better hunting packs that can do double duty as a SHTF pack or whatever. So lets say SHTF ok well for sure if you are on the move on your feet you will have a back pack with all your goodies inside, so where do you carry all your mags, radio's, pistol, etcetc that is my question. Now I am thinking a chest rig with a front pouch for radio and such then some mag poushes on the sides in hunting season could double and carry a GPS,camera, knife, whatever will fit in the mag pouches. So someone out there needs to be marketing a well made (I hate cheap stuff) pack that is more than a one trick pony... your thoughts please.....
  12. Well at least this week should be a cramp free night.......
  13. I am far from a expert but I think a gas block is a gasblock but it has to fit the dimensions of the barrel where it attaches...
  14. Magwa

    freezer meat... :)

    Deer out here are what they eat, there is no sage brush in this part of the state so the deer and elk all eat the same food. Most people complain of the taste of Mule deer is like sage brush well there in none here and they taste like elk and they are bigger so you get more meat for the bang..... they live in different country than the white tails do but they do overlap in places I will see both species while hunting.... A big mature MD lives in very tough steep terrain he is hard to hunt because of where he lives, his eyesight is second to none and his best defense id distance. A WT buck can live in your back yard and you never see him so they both are hard to hunt but for different reasons Elk can be hard to hunt or very easy depending on where you find them the big bulls are pretty savy about not being caught out in the open but all in all they are not hard to hunt just hard to find as they only live on about 10% of the country you are hunting where as deer can be all over the country.... best to eat in my book ELK, Moose, MD, WT, the reason I do not hunt WT deer is they taste so strong in the rut I have shot deer that the dogs would not eat.... never had that happen with MD.....
  15. Welcome from Idaho 2336 pull up a stump and sit by the fire you will probably be here for awhile.... :)
  16. I like that it has that organic look that and that is a one of a kind.... very nice..
  17. Blue109 is good to go had a great smooth transaction with him and everything was just as described and super fast shipping thanks Blue109
  18. Magwa

    freezer meat... :)

    he was a amazing man did 30 years in the Navy retired out at 48 years old ,became a LEO and worked at that till age 55 then hired on with the FAA as a crash investigator and finished out he career there then played golf every day till he passed in 1995, fought in world war 2 and Korean war and was sunk three times.....his last ship the CVS Wasp was my first ship right before they moth balled her.....
  19. Where is the ring ring bell?
  20. Will do 98 we shop at costco every month thanks for the tip....
  21. I am having that tomorrow night ..... sounds awesome.... Hope I can find all the stuff to make it around here might be iffy on the adobo sauce....
  22. I want that recipe.. sounds great...
  23. Well there are always more ways to skin a cat than one... so whatever cooking method works for you is awesome... We like to use cast iron and we like to cook them quick the key is heat you have to have it up high..... when the skillet is hot put in the deer or elk steaks and sear them hard and fast on one side then turn in about 2 or 3 min to other side and sear that side do not turn anymore you can puncture the meat to see how done it is you want medium to medium rare then take off of skillet let set for about 3 min and eat...... they will be juicy, tender, and have major flavor..... we use only peanut oil to fry in as it is the only oil that will take high heat without breaking down....
  24. Sausage Make it with pork shoulder that has a lot of fat then don't add any fat to it just use like 25 % pork shoulder to 75% ground venison..... I always get a kick out of people who say they do not like venison. Most if not all of them probably had it cooked wrong or the animal was not butchered properly and hung for 4 to 9 days... Venison you have to cook it only to medium at most it is lean meat and when over done is tough.. remember has to be pink in the middle a little redder is better. We vacuum seal all our fish and meat we make all our own hamburger and breakfast sausage, everything is boned out then cut... lol my kids grew up teething on bear jerky people asked all the time what are they chewing on and it was always a chunk of bear jerky... I remember the first time my kids had beef the oldest was probably 5 or 6 we had just finished building our house and we decided to celebrate so we bought two big T bones and I cooked them over a alder fire we cut them up and put some on each girls plate the oldest took a bite and got the weirdest look on her face and spit it out and said ewwwwww what is this....... she had never had fat in her mouth before and it freaked her out lol......
×
×
  • Create New...