About Me
- About Firefighter
- Biography
- Outdoor fanatic
- Location
- White Lake
- Interests
- Hunting/Fishing/Sports
- Occupation
- Firefighter/Paramedic & Call Maker
- Your Age
- 26
- Hunter/Fisher/Alloutdoors
- All outdoors
- Bowhunter/Gunhunter/All Firearms
- all methods
- Days in the field
- 99+
- Frequency of visits
- Daily
- Online Purchases
- Yes
- Favorite animal to hunt
- Whitetail
-
Signature
- -Jason
Blog
View Firefighter's BlogRecent Entries
Latest Blog Entry
Posted in Hunting Blogs
Michigan spring turkey season. There is perhaps no taste more bittersweet in the outdoors than that of a kill on opening day. Why is success bittersweet? Because one is then forced to wait an entire year before the pounding heartbeat is felt in one's throat as a majestic bird takes his final fatal steps. Here is my story of my opening day...
As is customary for me, my hunt began not as shooting light dawned at 6:10 am today, but rather weeks ago through hours and miles of scouting....
As is customary for me, my hunt began not as shooting light dawned at 6:10 am today, but rather weeks ago through hours and miles of scouting....
Posted in Hunting Blogs
My Michigan elk hunt had 8 days allowed for me to pursue the animal of my dreams. It was broken up into 2 parts, each consisting of 4 days. The first 4 day season encompassed the last 2 days in August and the first 2 days in September. The only real way to describe those 4 days of hunting is hot and miserable. Temperatures flirted with 90 on 2 of the days. Walking 10 to 15 miles per day in that weather, over terrain that was anything but flat, was about as fun as wrestling a hungry grizzly bear....
Posted in Hunting Blogs

Without a doubt, one of, if not the most important factor in consistently harvesting whitetails with archery equipment is proper scent control. Most hunters are aware of this, but only a few actually put in the effort to minimize their scent “footprint”. Why doesn’t everyone go all-out with scent control when they know it will increase their odds at killing deer? The answer is simple. Most hunters are too lazy to put...
Posted in Hunting Blogs
To say the weather has been a factor in this young spring turkey season is an understatement. With high temps hovering at least ten degrees below averages, snow, wind, rain, and clouds, all these factors have equated to an unusually late spring. With a late spring comes a delay in “normal” turkey activity, including but not limited to gobbling, hen nesting, and responsiveness to calls. The perfect storm has brewed up a heck of a hunt for those lucky enough (or unlucky enough in this instance), to...
Posted in Hunting Blogs
“In the school that is the outdoors, there is no graduation day”. Never before has this truth been so evident as it has become this spring, the year 2010.
I’ll preface this by saying I used to consider myself an above average turkey hunter. In a state where success rates hover around 33%, I have never had to hunt more than 2 days to bag a gobbler, sans my first season. I took the hard lessons of that first year and turned them into consistent success through hard work, persistence,...
I’ll preface this by saying I used to consider myself an above average turkey hunter. In a state where success rates hover around 33%, I have never had to hunt more than 2 days to bag a gobbler, sans my first season. I took the hard lessons of that first year and turned them into consistent success through hard work, persistence,...
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Great job,...