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Monday, February 20, 2012

Mid-Winter (or the lack of) Wanderings at Long Ridge Deer Camp

Occasionally during the winter it is good to take a road trip, and this month I went to the New Hampshire Farm and Forest Exposition in Manchester. I did not find it a particularly intriguing experience, but did enjoy visiting NH Fish and Game exhibits along with the NH Trappers association exhibit. Most of the rest of the show was about locally grown foods, and a few equipment exhibits. I love the idea of locally grown foodstuffs, and supporting small farmers but found little of interest in their booths. The equipment displays I always like, but find most of it far beyond the pocketbook. So for a cost of (gas, parking, admission) sixty bucks, I'll forgo this show next year. 





Above you see a stash of 30-06 ammo above my bunk at camp. I was checking this out the other day, and the boxes of spent shells below, and decided to figure out if it would pay to start reloading for rifle. 
I have a bunch of ammunition  already that I seldom shoot, every thing from 9mm to .308 stuff, mostly from days when ammunition was reasonably priced! At today's cost, I decided to get serious about the benefits of self made ordinance. 
Below is a loader I have used for years for shotgun. I was quite into trap at one point, and the loader definitely paid for itself in a short time. About all I do these days with shotgun is a bit of turkey and upland hunting, so I might as well sell this set-up and put the money toward a rifle/pistol reloader...or should I?
When I sat down and did the numbers, I was surprised. It will take about four hundred dollars worth of equipment, decent equipment, to get started. I know, I KNOW, cheaper set-ups are available. But if you reload for volume, you will want good scales, good mics, good trimmers etc. Four hundred might do it, and that would be my cost (I have an FFL). If you cost powder, primers, and start with unfired brass, you can reload a typical rifle shell for about 1.25 to 1.50 each, or about 26.00 bucks a box. To be sure, that is new brass, and you can re-use that brass again and again. Reloading the second time, brings the cost down about .75 a round bringing the cost of a box of twenty down to 15.00 dollars. Not bad, until you see that you can buy commercial  practice stuff for not much more than that. On the other hand, the most accurate load in my 30-06 is Federal Premium 110 grain Barnes TTSX. It groups 1/2 to 3/4 all day long from a six pound rifle. Each box retails for $42.00 so doing the math here, it would pay me to invest in gear IF I decide to shoot more than a box or two a year. Even if I didn't, I just learned that Federal is no longer loading this favorite of mine, and Barnes tells me that no one else is either. So I find a new accurate round, or load my own. Still making up my mind. 
Winter here in NH is quite unusual this year. We have had only thirty inches of snow so far, and it is essentially all gone! 15 degrees at night, 35 degrees during the day. I had put exactly one mile on my snowmobile, and then there it sat. Yesterday, back on the trailer, for good. The picture below shows a ton of camp firewood freshly cut from rock maples where I am expanding a pasture. The lack of snow  has allowed me to get much done that normally waits til spring. The Frozen ground allows great log hauling. 
Below are the pups on an interior trail which  having a bit of snow helps us see where the wild creatures are crossing and what they are eating. Incidentally, the deer will not be yarding up this year, and with the huge amount of mast and forage on the ground should hit spring in terrific shape! 
Here is Luna drinking from a stream hidden in her 'cone zone'. She is the pup that was nastily beaten down into the mud last spring by a protective doe, broken ribs, right eye damage etc. She does know how to find trouble!
Khalie on another interior trail standing amid thousands of hemlock cones. Every species of tree we have had a prodigious crop this year, and wildlife will benefit greatly.
Trees are tapped, a sure sign that spring is around the corner. Of course, it feels like March now..I like to think the past few months have gone like this: October, March, March, March, March, and next month it really WILL be March! 
Two Long Ridge admonishments for you all!
Now, hopefully off to some successful coyote hunting - SOMETHING has to change!
jackzeller@myfairpoint.net

4 comments:

  1. The lack of winter is the key word that is for sure. The trip might have been a bust but at least you got out and did something different out of the norm.
    As far as reloading it is easier to not bother unless you plan to do it a lot, in my opinion.

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  2. Rick, I have come to the same conclusion!

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  3. Lack of winter has been a blessing to some while a bummer to others. I'm in the in-between crowd. I stopped going to the local shows ever year because they are not worth it in my opinion. Seems like more vendors of shamwow, dicers, etc then hunting, fishing and outdoors products. Went to a local fly fishing show fro $1 admission which was small but how can you beat $1.

    Thanks for sharing.

    Passinthru Outdoors Blog - Sharing the Passion

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  4. Hi! Yes, Trym eats the seed to :-) We have now only hunting on fox to 15th March. Then is the hunting over for this season. We only can stalking hogs at feeding places. Not females with small ones.

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