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Everything posted by Workman
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D R A W . . . . R E S U L T S ! Which guy are you? (256k warning)
Workman replied to HEADACHE's topic in Rifle hunting for Coues Deer
B... Whatever, I have a early bull tag and I can buy a leftover to hunt the ghosts down south! -
Hunting Vanity Plates
Workman replied to grizzly's topic in Miscellaneous Items related to Coues Deer
My buddy has JAVIEYE on his rig. I'll get Him to post it. -
She most certainly does TJ, she's my only child right now but a little brother doodle is in the works! She's a little over a year old and one of the best things to ever happen to me. It's amazing the amount of joy these creatures bring into ones life.
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Few more of my goldendoodle Remie.
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Awesome! Congrats!!
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I checked the mail today after seeing this and there it was. Must be the early bull tag or something!
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Congrats little man, that's AWESOME!!!! It took me over 20 years and a bunch of broken arrows to get my first wabbit with a bow.
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Got my vote!
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That's amazing!!!
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IMO western hunter is a great mag and so is its sister magazine Elk Hunter, I don't think you will find exactly what you're looking for in any ONE magazine but what I do know is that right here at CWT.com there is an abundance of the very best knowledge available and members willing to share that knowledge when it comes to hunting in the great state of Arizona. It could take you months or years to go through it all but I'd be willin to bet that you can find what you're looking for right here, if not I'm sure there is a member (probably more than one) willing to throw some western hunting techniques in your direction. I know I kind of got off the magazine track a little but IMO there's no mag that will provide the info that CWT.com does.
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For the kuiu camo it's all online at their site. I don't believe that any stores carry it as of yet that I know of. I read about every review I could find on how they fit and ordered accordingly, definitely not my way to shop but i bit the bullet and did it and I couldn't be happier. From what I gathered order a size bigger in the waist than what you normally wear, that's what I did with their attack pant and they're perfect with room to layer thermos for the colder weather.
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At 6'-5" with a 36" inseam I've had this problem for a while now. I have found that Kuiu pants are much longer than I've ever had. They say that the inseam is 34 but they are longer than any of my 36" Levi's or wranglers and they also have a 2" cuff on them that is easy to release ( I didn't need to) to gain the extra inches. They have two camo patterns and two solid colors charcoal and desert tan to choose from. It's not the cheapest camo around but it is very good quality IMO. Hope this helps you.
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In my opinion it is better than all three you've listed. It tastes like a little piece of heaven with a cherry on top!
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As if that weren’t disturbing enough, on Thursday The Washington Post reported that the NSA has entered into agreements with nine Internet service providers—including Google, YouTube, Facebook, Yahoo, Skype, Apple and AOL—to allow the NSA to obtain from them all sorts of private information communicated over their networks. Dropbox, the Post reports, is said to be “coming soon.” According to the Post, the top-secret program, PRISM, allows the FBI and the NSA to extract “audio, video, photographs, e-mails, documents and connection logs that enable analysts to track a person’s movements and contacts over time.” The PRISM program, unlike the NSA phone records program, does not sweep up all data in a vacuum. Rather, it enables government analysts to search the private Internet company’s own data for key terms that are supposed to make it more likely than not that the target is “foreign.” But this requirement of only 51 percent certainty means that much of the information disclosed will inevitably concern Americans. The extent of the information available to the government is extraordinary. The Post reports that, according to a PRISM “User Guide,” Skype “can be monitored for audio when one end of the call is a conventional telephone and for any combination of 'audio, video, chat, and file transfers' when Skype users connect by computer alone. Google’s offerings include Gmail, voice and video chat, Google Drive files, photo libraries, and live surveillance of search terms.” By combining information from both programs, the government can rather quickly paint a detailed picture of the private life of almost anyone. The persons with whom one communicates, the documents one saves in the “cloud,”—photographs, e-mails, Facebook postings and even audio Internet calls—are all available. The government claims this is useful in fighting terrorism. Sure it is. But it would also be useful in fighting terrorism if all of us were required to open our homes, luggage, wallets, purses, computers and private communications to the government at its direction, without a warrant based on probable cause of criminal activity. Privacy makes it easier for terrorists and other criminals to pursue bad ends. But privacy also makes it possible for the rest of us to live our lives with intimacy, to develop our personalities and ideas and associations without fear of government oversight, and to think and act for ourselves. Privacy is the life blood of a vibrant democracy and a free society. But in Silicon Valley and the NSA, those values seem increasingly old-fashioned, victims of the technological advances that make it easy to track almost every move a person living in the twenty-first century makes. Every phone call we dial; every Internet site we browse; every credit card purchase we make; every bank deposit or withdrawal; every e-mail we send and, if we carry a smart phone, even every step we take is shared with some private third party—the phone company, the Internet service provider, the bank, credit card company, etc. In the 1970s, when no one could foresee the digital age we now take for granted, the Supreme Court decided that information we share with third parties is not protected by the Fourth Amendment from government efforts to obtain it from that third party. As a result, the Fourth Amendment’s warrant and individualized suspicion requirements do not apply, and the government is free to obtain information without any suspicion at all on any or, as in the Verizon example, all of us. That “third party disclosure” rule is the single greatest threat to the continued protection of privacy in the digital age, and it desperately needs reconsideration. But in the meantime, Congress should act. The absence of constitutional protections does not mean that Congress cannot create statutory protections. It has done so in the past, creating statutory safeguards, for example, for bank and credit records, and for the real-time collection of phone data. But this week’s revelations make clear that the protections are outmoded and insufficient. To be sure, the government needs the authority to track individuals suspected of criminal or terrorist activity. But does it really need to be able to track us all in such a sweeping manner? Somewhere along the way after 9/11, we lost our bearings on the balance between privacy and security. Because it largely happened through secret orders and secret programs, Americans did not even know what we had sacrificed. We are beginning to get an inkling. If privacy is going to survive, Congress needs to launch a full investigation, with the aim of informing Americans about the intrusions on our privacy, and imposing reasonable limits to ensure that those of us who are not engaged in criminal or terrorist activity are not innocent casualties of the modern surveillance state. Read more: http://www.thenation.com/blog/174708/secret-nsa-program-gives-agency-unprecedented-access-private-internet-communications#ixzz2VXuWqfLW
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Another one of them find the deer pictures
Workman replied to prowlerMan's topic in Coues Deer Hunting in Arizona
Fun times man! Now highlight where that lion was in this picture? -
Another one of them find the deer pictures
Workman replied to prowlerMan's topic in Coues Deer Hunting in Arizona
Yep thats a tough one! -
Love this thread! I'm a Long time reader of CWT.com, only been a member for a year or so and have never posted anything, so here's my first... Its my 1 year old Goldendoodle Remie! This is her at 6 months.