Trad Gang
Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: adamgti on March 22, 2012, 12:34:00 AM
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Well I'm turning 26 this year, I'm athletic and can't sleep right now because I'm both missing hunting season and counting down the days until the start of next. I'm not sure if its jealousy or just being grump but it seems there is no shortage of guys in the hunting community just waiting to put a young guy down, or remind him of what they have done and what he hasn't.
I personally think there are 2 types of guys I most commonly run into. The ones who are jealous and who likely can't climb "that mountain over there". they usually are out of shape and way over a different hill. Then there are the guys who shoot real wood bows. who cares what shape they're in or what they have done. They mostly keep their success to themselves until you enquirer. they respond saying, "I can't do that anymore", but you could probably find sheep here.
I guess I'm a little P***edd off right now. I posted a picture on my social media account and on came the negative comments.
I personally don't think I have come across anyone like this on trad gang.
thanks for not singling me out because of my age.
thanks,
Dennis
Calvin
Bert
and Ben for teaching me everything I know.
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im 19 and the guys ive met from here are all topclass, love this palce
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Awwwwh Maaaan! What i wouldn't give to be 26 years old again right now....Then again, i lived through those years once. I may not the second go round.
i think you may be having a perspective problem. listen to the stories told and savor them, not resent them. :thumbsup:
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Life will be a lot more fun, relax a bit and don't let someone regardless of age push your buttons. Practice, pick a spot and shoot straight.
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thanks guys,
I usually let water run off my back, but this situation really irked me. Anyways I'm over now and counting down the days to get my new bow and starting packing for the Yukon.
I guess bows on the little delta will have to get me through the next few months.
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It will be here and over before you know it so slow down and enjoy the wait. Some times the wishin and dreaming about the hunt are pretty cool. Just sayin, been out west a bit and the first couple years I burned my self out when I got there worrying about finding the game. It is not just a hunt but an adventure. Good luck in the Yukon sir.
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Adam don't forget your camera!! And please post some pics for us! :wavey:
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I am 18 and have never had anyone treat my opinion on traditional bowhunting with as much respect as all you guys and gals of Tradgang do. Thanks for being such a supportive and understanding group of people. I can only hope that someday I can share a hunting camp with all of you.
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Tradgang is a dedicated traditional archery site that is made up of hardcore traditional archers, this is probably one of the most professional run forums in archery i have ever been a member of, the admin here run a real tight ship that most of the moron poster can't handle so they don't hang around here for long, i read some of the rules and think they are a little strong but then it is nice to come to a community and be able to read for post and threads that are informational and enjoyable, i have been a member her for a long time when i joined there were only 200 of us on here and it still runs as smooth now as it did then, thanks Terry for a place we can all call home form the new person just thinking of trying traditional to the seasoned veteran
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and oh ya i'm with KirkII quit your complaining 26 would be great! 18 even better lol
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Keep your skin thick Adam, there's no shortage of people that try to put others down to make themselves feel better. In the end all that matters is how you think of yourself and how you treat others :)
Keep on truckin' brudda :thumbsup:
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First I would like to say just shooting a real wood bow does not make you a better hunter or a better person. You find good and bad in all people no matter what there choice of weapon. For me I am always trying to learn and become a better hunter and woodsman. You will find great help from experianced hunters willing to share their knowledge. But nothing will replace the experiance you gain through your own trial and error. It by far will be your best teacher. That being said it takes plain old time in the woods. You cant speed time and why would you want to. Be happy with where you are at at this time and set goals to where you want to be. I have never done one thing in my life where I have not run across some negativity. I cant tell you how many people have told me you cant do this or your stupid for dreaming about a certain goal. Dont worry about someone else just worry about you! I know when someone is blowing smoke and I move on. I also know when someone is sincere and I pause to listen. No matter what everyone has something to offer and you will learn something if your mind is open. Even if your talking to a negative person and you walk away with the mind to never be like that and you treat the next person you talk to with respect you learned something. Hunting is a year long gig and although fall is magic time I love all the preseason dreaming and planing. Use that to keep your mind happy.
Scott Teaschner
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Respect,Tact,Honor,and discipline are things that you wont find in society anymore, thank the lord we have TG the only society I want to be part of.
Enjoy the wait for the season, hone your skills and your gear its what makes us better hunters. Patience is a great asset.Tim
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I can remember being 26 and I still think of it as being one of the best years in my life at that point in time.
I fully expect to make 62 even better that 26 ever thought about being...lol
Take what you can use and leave the rest.
You can easily make up your own mind once you've tried it yourself.
You'll do just fine!
God bless,Mudd
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Thanks All,
I have 8 brothers so you would think I would be a little tougher... hahahaha.
Bjorn,
I'll be snapping pictures like crazy. The area wont be as beautiful as it would be later in the year, but I think it will be still okay ;)
thanks,
Adam
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Its hard to see now, but accomplishments will come. Whether its work, hunting, or whatever, if you keep chipping away you will look back in 20 years and see a long list of stuff you have done. You will probably also see a long list of stuff you thought would happen that didn't or didn't yet.
When you are looking back, you will realize that the journey and the struggles along the way may not have always been fun at the time, but they will often hold sweeter memories than the ones you have of reaching a goal or destination.
Stay true to yourself and take the high road as often as possible eventhough its often steeper.
Your 26, living in Canada, and you bowhunt. You have the ingredients for one heck of a journey.
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I'm getting ready to turn 36 and when I look back on the last ten years the only thing I can think of that got through the tougher times was determination. Although I did not hunt exclusively with traditional equipment back then, I had tried it and realized I wasn't ready. When I took the leap there was no shortage of strange looks and crude comments.......it made me mad.
You NEED the younger years to get you there. Keep your head up and go burn some of that energy!
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x2 what everybody else said...your among the best of the best here. Life is short..enjoy your time..go shooting and forget what was said on your "social networking site"
Shoot straight (and enjoy it)
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This is a blind medium. I love that!
When I read a post , I get the ideas. If the ideas strike me, I may go check a profile to see if that will give me more of a notion of where the author is coming from.
Your posts get the same attention from me as those by Ron LaClair or Charlie Lamb. It is only after I read them that I might look to see who made them. After a few years I have an idea who is saying what and why, but at the outset all type looks alike. It is ideas that make us individual, and family. Not age, good or trashy looks, and only somewhat, grammar. :readit:
Killdeer :campfire:
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At 26, my wife and I just had our first child....he turned 26 yesterday! Life is just beginning for you, friend. Don't let things get you down, you have time and youth on your side yet. Although I'd been bowhunting for some time by then.....at 26, I was still just a "pup", and struggling in a lot of ways. And hey, I did'nt have trad-gang, or anybody else for that matter, to help me along. It was a tough journey for a lot of us back before trad became popular again....but a journey I would'nt trade for anything. Have fun now....and like others have said, enjoy it while you can, because the next 20 or 30 years will go by in a blink.
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No thanks, I'm about to turn 45 and I wouldn't want to be 26 again. Mostly because the wife I had back then. I'd go for 21. ANyhow just hunt when you can and build experiences, treasure them all and sood you'll have as many stories as the old dudes have.
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At the end of the day its not the stories I'm worried about. I love those, just ask the older guys in Alberta. I'm like a sponge I can't seem to get enough. It's the negative energy and responses people make.
I guess if you don't have something nice to say then should you really be saying anything.
Anyways thanks for all the comments I didn't mean to seem like a sniveling baby I was just tired at the end of the day and was greeted by some very negative comments on some pictures I'm really proud of.
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Once you realize its not a competition but a journey, only then will you enjoy the entire process.
I think you are already to that point but most people who are quick with the put downs are not. Often they are the same people who have an "end justifies the means" approach. the same people who wouldn't think twice about getting a head mount on a poached deer then brag about it and have no issue walking past it every day.
I would rather have a few Trad gang minded folks at my fire than 2000 rich, entitled, and self respect lacking folks in camp.
That's why I love it here.
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"I would rather have a few Trad gang minded folks at my fire than 2000 rich, entitled, and self respect lacking folks in camp.
That's why I love it here."
THAT WHAT I WAS TRYING TO GET AT
hahahaha thanks,
Adam
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Adam,
We all have days where someone says something that gets under our skin, something that normally we could handle. Use it as a reminder to not be that kind of person. Once you accept that happiness comes from within, the external forces have less impact.
You do what you do because you enjoy it. It is fun to share what you enjoy with like-minded people. Apparently, not everyone viewing your social media page can appreciate this. Set your own goals and standards for accomplishment and don't settle for someone else's idea of success.
Don't let it get you down and do not let it stop you from sharing your interests with others. If anything, concentrate some of your time and energy on establishing friendships with people that will be supportive and that can find joy in sharing your life and your accomplishments.
I tried to remember what life was like at 26, but my current fat and decrepid self kept blocking my recalling that time of my life; probably to save me from a bout of depression! LOL!
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Adam, how about a little background for us; how come you are lucky enough to be headed to NWT? Whatcha' going to be hunting for, when, etc?
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Killdeer and Cyclic Rivers sum up my thoughts, especially Charlie's comment about life not being a competition. It took me 60 years to begin to learn that. I would add that most of the things we chase so hard amount to nothing at the end.
You are blessed to be able to hunt in the Yukon. But I suspect even that will turn out to have been greater in the anticipation than the realization.
The guys that keep retelling the stories of their great hunts may be trying to convince themselves that those hunts were great.
On the cloudy rainy days, most of us get a look at the real value of things, and it's a different view than we get reading someone's huning story.
Make friends. Watch your back, but sympathize with enemies, who don't understand life.
Jim
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Great advice everyone thanks.
Background:
I have been waiting for this hunt for 3 years. My brother inlay who is essentially my best friend/dad/brother offered it to me as incentive to go back to school and get a degree. I grew up in the Yukon and never got a chance to hunt caribou. Well here's my chance. I'll be hounding mountain caribou near the nahanni ridge At the beginning of august.
Well I'm looking forward to this trip and even more then that I'm looking forward to being done school for good on the 16th of April.
I'll be working for the same company I have been with for 2 years now, but you better believe I already have the time booked of work .
Thanks all,
Adam Brennan