Randall Knife Collectors Club Clinton Knives
Page 1 of 2 1 2 >
Topic Options
Rate This Topic
#179552 - 04/09/19 09:32 AM Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt
GCTom41 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 01/25/10
Posts: 2367
Loc: NY
Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt-High 90's to 100+ degrees. Their dry season biting bugs not bad except ticks.

Campeche means "Land of the Snake and Ticks"

Good primer to get ready for Spring Eastern Turkey.

Ocellated Turkey, Greater Curassaw Male, Greater Curassaw Female and a crested Guan (no pic).

Their species of deer are Brockett Deer (3 color phase-Red, Gray & Brown)very small. they do have a Tropical whitetail that looks nothing like ours; almost white with a dark gray looks like a mask on its face.

Very safe and the food and people were great.

Tom Flynn


Attachments
------Oscelated Turkey-KT.jpg

------Greater Curassaw Male-KT.jpg

------Greater Curassaw Female-KT.jpg


_________________________
Tom Flynn
NRA Endowment
RKS#5918
RKCC-CM-178
SCI Life Member
DSC Life Member

Top
#179553 - 04/09/19 09:44 AM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: GCTom41]
W Polidori Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 02/09/16
Posts: 5791
Loc: Central New York
Great looking birds Tom, colorful too. Glad you had a successful trip. Welcome back.
_________________________
Warren

Top
#179557 - 04/09/19 01:40 PM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: W Polidori]
coachblalock Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/03/16
Posts: 1872
Loc: Lake Fork, East Texas
Thanks Tom!!

That is pretty cool.
_________________________
"Filet that fish? Hell naw! I'll scale him, gut him, fry him up in grease, take him by the head and tail, and play him like a French Harp!" - Uncle Paul sometime in the 60s.

Top
#179563 - 04/09/19 06:35 PM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: coachblalock]
pappy19 Online
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 10/31/07
Posts: 7371
Loc: Garden Valley, Idaho
For ticks, us old foresters would tie a dog flea collar around our boots and hang one on our belt in the back, no more ticks. Or chiggers either.

Pap
_________________________
Mike Allen
RKCC-CM-086
True West Magazine Maniac
Randall Collector
Behring Made Collector
Ruana Collector
Glock Fan
NRA- Life Member since 1975
mikenlu99@aol.com

Top
#179564 - 04/09/19 06:53 PM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: pappy19]
W Polidori Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 02/09/16
Posts: 5791
Loc: Central New York
Tom,

Turpentine was popular here years ago to repel ticks. Any use of it down south?
_________________________
Warren

Top
#179566 - 04/09/19 07:03 PM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: W Polidori]
Chief Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/05/05
Posts: 5413
Loc: Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Great Hunt!
_________________________
See Ya, Chief
RKCC CM-037
RKS #5154

If you put off following The LORD just remember......They don't serve breakfast in hell!

Top
#179573 - 04/09/19 09:35 PM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: Chief]
pappy19 Online
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 10/31/07
Posts: 7371
Loc: Garden Valley, Idaho
Did you eat any of those birds?

Pap
_________________________
Mike Allen
RKCC-CM-086
True West Magazine Maniac
Randall Collector
Behring Made Collector
Ruana Collector
Glock Fan
NRA- Life Member since 1975
mikenlu99@aol.com

Top
#179574 - 04/09/19 10:16 PM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: pappy19]
W Polidori Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 02/09/16
Posts: 5791
Loc: Central New York
Tom,

Send me some feathers Lol!
_________________________
Warren

Top
#179575 - 04/10/19 07:14 AM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: pappy19]
GCTom41 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 01/25/10
Posts: 2367
Loc: NY
Pap,

Ate the Turkey, Guan and the Curassaw's. The Curassaw's by far were the tastiest birds. Very similar in taste to a Grouse. Large breast cutlets marinated and fried in a lime butter.

Great chef's in camp.

Tom Flynn
_________________________
Tom Flynn
NRA Endowment
RKS#5918
RKCC-CM-178
SCI Life Member
DSC Life Member

Top
#179577 - 04/10/19 10:09 AM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: W Polidori]
Windsor Online
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 08/12/15
Posts: 1870
Loc: Texas!
Originally Posted By: W Polidori
Tom,

Turpentine was popular here years ago to repel ticks. Any use of it down south?


(not Tom but I'll kick in an answer)

I hadn't heard of that.

I knew about the flea collar trick, used it once or twice with decent results. Deer ticks are happy to start at the knee when you brush against the wrong plant, whereas the bigger ticks tend to start much lower.

Doing "something" to stave off the ticks is pretty much a requirement if you're in the woods in Eastern Oklahoma or Western Arkansas.
_________________________
Rob

Top
#179578 - 04/10/19 11:57 AM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: Windsor]
RamKingJC Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 09/12/15
Posts: 3066
Looks like a great hunt Tom...with excellent results! Thanks for sharing =]
_________________________
James Caruso
RKCC #CM008
rugermark2jc@gmail.com

"First comes smiles, then lies. Last is gunfire."

Top
#179593 - 04/11/19 02:38 PM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: RamKingJC]
coachblalock Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/03/16
Posts: 1872
Loc: Lake Fork, East Texas
Tom:

I've been thinking about your pictures all night and today...what a trip!!!

Fellas: I can testify as to something that WILL work against ticks.---FRONTLINE, the tick medicine for dogs.

Put some in a ziplock bag with a rag in it. When you are about to go where ticks are, just pat the rag on your clothes. It don't take much! It works on red bugs (chiggers) and skeeters too.

If Campeche is the name for "Land Of Snakes and Ticks", then thats what I ought to call my place! But then I'd be leaving out the Red Bugs and Skeeters and Hogs!

Those pictures are worth puttin' up with the ticks. Awesome!



Edited by coachblalock (04/11/19 02:41 PM)
_________________________
"Filet that fish? Hell naw! I'll scale him, gut him, fry him up in grease, take him by the head and tail, and play him like a French Harp!" - Uncle Paul sometime in the 60s.

Top
#179594 - 04/11/19 03:49 PM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: coachblalock]
LarryWW1246 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 03/20/06
Posts: 1730
Coach--

Good idea.

The active ingredient is Fipronil, which is also used to put a barrier into the ground around buildings to kill subterranean termites. Terminix labels it Termidor, and others use other names.

But be careful with it. If you do handle it, wear latex gloves and dispose of any contaminated materials wrapped up in newspaper, then wash your hands thoroughly.

It is very harmful to beneficial insects like bees, and whole colonies have been wiped out after they were accidentally exposed. One or more (like the termites) carry it back to the colony/hive where it is passed around and kills any that come in contact with it or eat it. Agricultural investigators have had to deal with it somehow wiping out bee hives here in Florida.

I guess a safer environmental approach would be to stick to the flea collars and/or DEET. Having come close to the consequences of Lyme disease, I prefer not to get bitten by any of the nasties.

Larry
_________________________
Larry W. Williams
RKCC #CM-041
ABKA #046
RKS #1246

Top
#179602 - 04/11/19 10:28 PM Re: Southern Mexico Jungle Hunt [Re: LarryWW1246]
coachblalock Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/03/16
Posts: 1872
Loc: Lake Fork, East Texas
Thanks Larry.
You are correct. Fipronil is very toxic. I read that even a concentration of one part per trillion is toxic to bees. That is one liter per cubic kilometer. Think about it. That’s not much.

It was in Organic or Physical Chemistry in college that we were discussing the toxicity of some substance, that someone in the class said that one gram of that particular substance could kill a million people. To which, Dr. Burr countered: “That’s like saying that a teaspoon of semen could impregnate 250 million women. The problem is distribution!”

Fipronil is some potent stuff. It should be handled carefully with the precaution of gloves. It probably wouldn’t do to sniff it either.

But it keeps the pests off my dogs. It will also keep them off of me. With what Lyme disease, West Nile Virus, and otherwise being eaten alive by the Skeeters around here, it’s danged if you do, and danged if you don’t.

I’m not sure that ANYTHING that really works is without risks. Thanks again for reminding us of that.


Edited by coachblalock (04/11/19 10:30 PM)
_________________________
"Filet that fish? Hell naw! I'll scale him, gut him, fry him up in grease, take him by the head and tail, and play him like a French Harp!" - Uncle Paul sometime in the 60s.

Top
Page 1 of 2 1 2 >


Moderator:  Peter_Kaufman