Guns and Self-Defense > Guns/Firearms
For every Jew-a .22!
old06:
yea newman this country was first fed on small game it took the Indians a whole tribe to put up deer elk buffalo and the such but there was always a rabbit or two on the spit
newman:
--- Quote from: old06 on April 01, 2008, 08:33:57 PM ---yea newman this country was first fed on small game it took the Indians a whole tribe to put up deer elk buffalo and the such but there was always a rabbit or two on the spit
--- End quote ---
Ask an old New Yorker and an old Texan about life during the great depression. Both tell of hard times but the New Yorker will tell of starvation, soup lines & eating garbage. The texan will tell of Rabbit, possum & turkey on the table.
old06:
--- Quote from: newman on April 02, 2008, 01:53:23 AM ---
--- Quote from: old06 on April 01, 2008, 08:33:57 PM ---yea newman this country was first fed on small game it took the Indians a whole tribe to put up deer elk buffalo and the such but there was always a rabbit or two on the spit
--- End quote ---
Ask an old New Yorker and an old Texan about life during the great depression. Both tell of hard times but the New Yorker will tell of starvation, soup lines & eating garbage. The texan will tell of Rabbit, possum & turkey on the table.
--- End quote ---
So true Bro that is the difference growing up I didn't always have what I wanted to eat but it what was in season friends and relatives would give us the least desirable cut of deer and small game and today I long for that time back we had a smoke house, canned, picked berries, and picked coal for the winterby walking the old strip mines and train track back in Pa.
newman:
--- Quote from: old06 on April 02, 2008, 07:42:53 AM ---
--- Quote from: newman on April 02, 2008, 01:53:23 AM ---
--- Quote from: old06 on April 01, 2008, 08:33:57 PM ---yea newman this country was first fed on small game it took the Indians a whole tribe to put up deer elk buffalo and the such but there was always a rabbit or two on the spit
--- End quote ---
Ask an old New Yorker and an old Texan about life during the great depression. Both tell of hard times but the New Yorker will tell of starvation, soup lines & eating garbage. The texan will tell of Rabbit, possum & turkey on the table.
--- End quote ---
So true Bro that is the difference growing up I didn't always have what I wanted to eat but it what was in season friends and relatives would give us the least desirable cut of deer and small game and today I long for that time back we had a smoke house, canned, picked berries, and picked coal for the winterby walking the old strip mines and train track back in Pa.
--- End quote ---
I'm very interested in home canning. With the long growing season in the South, you'd only have a few months of the year where you had to eat preserves. And even then, home canned chilli, tomatoes, pickles, fruit, jelly & soup would keep you going. Plus you can dry peas & corn.
You can grow more than enough grains for a family AND chickens on a small plot and hogs live well on scraps. There's chicken, pork & bacon without firing a shot!
old06:
--- Quote from: newman on April 02, 2008, 07:55:20 AM ---
--- Quote from: old06 on April 02, 2008, 07:42:53 AM ---
--- Quote from: newman on April 02, 2008, 01:53:23 AM ---
--- Quote from: old06 on April 01, 2008, 08:33:57 PM ---yea newman this country was first fed on small game it took the Indians a whole tribe to put up deer elk buffalo and the such but there was always a rabbit or two on the spit
--- End quote ---
Ask an old New Yorker and an old Texan about life during the great depression. Both tell of hard times but the New Yorker will tell of starvation, soup lines & eating garbage. The texan will tell of Rabbit, possum & turkey on the table.
--- End quote ---
So true Bro that is the difference growing up I didn't always have what I wanted to eat but it what was in season friends and relatives would give us the least desirable cut of deer and small game and today I long for that time back we had a smoke house, canned, picked berries, and picked coal for the winterby walking the old strip mines and train track back in Pa.
--- End quote ---
I'm very interested in home canning. With the long growing season in the South, you'd only have a few months of the year where you had to eat preserves. And even then, home canned chilli, tomatoes, pickles, fruit, jelly & soup would keep you going. Plus you can dry peas & corn.
You can grow more than enough grains for a family AND chickens on a small plot and hogs live well on scraps. There's chicken, pork & bacon without firing a shot!
--- End quote ---
I'am not quite sure about how this link stuff works but this link stuff works but this site's back issues will tell more than I can explain www.backwoodshome.com/previssue.html plus they have a ton of good info
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