Same here. Hoping to get back to Crater Lake (LNF) This summer, and trying for a Pronghorn tag for there.I know Hatchet and Bogard. All too well.
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Same here. Hoping to get back to Crater Lake (LNF) This summer, and trying for a Pronghorn tag for there.I know Hatchet and Bogard. All too well.
I'm surprised one isn't flat on one side, and another isn't wobbling and trying to go a diferent direction. Imagine how many carts he had to spec.Good thing the wheels on that cart are water cooled!
Not to start any shit or anything, but I dig that photo out when some "Audiophile" starts talking about how true fidelity is only found on vinyl.
* You'reI think I've covered this before.
Look at the guy to right.
He's what...6'.....5'8"....??
The nut and bolt are chocked maybe a foot off the ground.
Saying its 96 anything, is as ridiculous as saying, "hand me the 11mm socket".
The proper wrench here is the popular and common 58-5/8".
Your welcome.
That guy is quite the machinist/mechanic considering his lack of machinery.
That was even more impressive in person.
Literally 10 minutes from me....Hwy 3 to Trinity lake. Ass deep in snow right now.
I've seen cocobolo similar to that![]()
IDK the full story on this knife. It was my grandfathers, made for him by a machinist friend of his in the '50s. I'd really like to know what the grip is made of.
He died when I was 3, and I claimed it when I was about 7 or 8. I carved my initials in the sheath.
Finally took it home when I was 14, old enough to go deer hunting. My grandmother gave me his .35 Rem. 336 at the same time. Took me 40 years to kill a deer with it.