Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
New posts
New media
New media comments
Latest activity
Classifieds
Media
New media
New comments
Search media
Log in
Register
What's New?
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Navigation
Install the app
Install
More Options
Advertise with us
Contact Us
Close Menu
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Forums
Hobbies & Interests
Hunting & Fishing
How to hunt Public Land in OK
Search titles only
By:
Reply to Thread
This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Stan Upchurch" data-source="post: 1843968" data-attributes="member: 24489"><p>Mostly, I've hunted lands. Except when there is a selected hunt I'd follow the regs and take my time. I spent a lot of my free time walking the land I'm going to hunt. This year will be different. I'll have a neww freewhell for my wheelchair next month and I'll spend a lot of time trying to find location s to hunt from in a wheelcnhair. I've been sucessful many years. A few years, when water was scarce hunting was had but somewhat sucessful. If you spen the time you will do OK. I hunt Bow, Black Powder, Shotgun and Rifle; any game that is good to eat. That is most of it. My wife however will not eat squirrels. So that season is always a scouting time. Most of my time has been spent in Central OK. So far. this summ er is harder because I'm in a manual wheelchair but with a new device called a freewheel I'll do better. Though I had a funny event that happen3ed 2 weeks ago. I slid down in a creek and got stuck. Crawled back to the truck9 half a mile) got a rope, block and tackle crawled back to where my chair was and it was gone. Spent 4 hours crawling down stream only to meet a warden at a road crossing. he asked qwhere I had b een/ when i told him he said that 2 squirrel hunters had seen me come in, found myu chair and pulled it out of the creek and put it in the back of my truck. Then they started looking for me. After an nhour and a half they went to the wardern and toldf them what happened. he said he figgured that I was following the creek bed looking for where tyhe chair might have gotten to and the creek crossed under a road about 2 miles south of the spot my truck was at. So he had been waiting for me to reac h the creek. Well I did. got a ride back to the truck went home and slept 13 hours. My wife almost would'ngt let me in the house for I was covered with mud from my hair to the bottom of my boots. Next time I'll wait awhlie before going to the tfruck.I have to admitt that I came upon 2 places where the deer crossed the creek that i had never known about. Lots of fun. can hardly wait until bow season begins. At 65 I'm slow but I'm through.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Stan Upchurch, post: 1843968, member: 24489"] Mostly, I've hunted lands. Except when there is a selected hunt I'd follow the regs and take my time. I spent a lot of my free time walking the land I'm going to hunt. This year will be different. I'll have a neww freewhell for my wheelchair next month and I'll spend a lot of time trying to find location s to hunt from in a wheelcnhair. I've been sucessful many years. A few years, when water was scarce hunting was had but somewhat sucessful. If you spen the time you will do OK. I hunt Bow, Black Powder, Shotgun and Rifle; any game that is good to eat. That is most of it. My wife however will not eat squirrels. So that season is always a scouting time. Most of my time has been spent in Central OK. So far. this summ er is harder because I'm in a manual wheelchair but with a new device called a freewheel I'll do better. Though I had a funny event that happen3ed 2 weeks ago. I slid down in a creek and got stuck. Crawled back to the truck9 half a mile) got a rope, block and tackle crawled back to where my chair was and it was gone. Spent 4 hours crawling down stream only to meet a warden at a road crossing. he asked qwhere I had b een/ when i told him he said that 2 squirrel hunters had seen me come in, found myu chair and pulled it out of the creek and put it in the back of my truck. Then they started looking for me. After an nhour and a half they went to the wardern and toldf them what happened. he said he figgured that I was following the creek bed looking for where tyhe chair might have gotten to and the creek crossed under a road about 2 miles south of the spot my truck was at. So he had been waiting for me to reac h the creek. Well I did. got a ride back to the truck went home and slept 13 hours. My wife almost would'ngt let me in the house for I was covered with mud from my hair to the bottom of my boots. Next time I'll wait awhlie before going to the tfruck.I have to admitt that I came upon 2 places where the deer crossed the creek that i had never known about. Lots of fun. can hardly wait until bow season begins. At 65 I'm slow but I'm through. [/QUOTE]
Insert Quotes…
Verification
Post Reply
Forums
Hobbies & Interests
Hunting & Fishing
How to hunt Public Land in OK
Search titles only
By:
Top
Bottom