the spank
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Planet Earth Wearing My Tinfoil Hat
Walking out to our blind yesterday morning in the pre-dawn darkness I was breaking trail through about a foot of snow with drifts above our knees in places on a canola stubble field that parallels the bush we have our blind set up in. I was going along at a good steady pace a few yards out from a fenceline that separates the bush pasture from the crop field when my right leg suddenly dropped like a ton of bricks and I did a face plant in the snow. I went to get back up and was stuck. My leg was underground almost to my knee and I could not pull it free of the hole. I stepped into a badger hole that was covered over with drifted snow completely unseen.
After a bit of maneuvering I was able to free my foot from my boot and leg from the hole. I laid back on my backpack for a second then rolled onto my side to pull my boot out of the hole to put back on my foot all the while keeping my bootless foot elevated free of the snow to keep dry. I could not budge my boot! Man was it wedged in there something wierd! After what seemed about two minutes of twisting and pulling I finally had my boot free'd of the hole and once more rolled onto my backpack and proceeded to put my boot back on. I whispered to my wife "ouch" and muffled a bit of a chuckle as I was still trying to remain in steatlh mode to sneak into the blind well before shooting time. We continued on, my ankle feeling a bit tender and at the gate leading to the bush discovered it wired shut so up and over we went and continued to the blind. We got settled in and as time passed I could feel my right boot getting tighter and tighter and I started to feel a small amount of pain. After about a 3.5 hour sit without seeing anything moving except geese we decided to call it a morning and head home with plans to sit at another blind we have located on another farm a few miles away. Well I was able to make it about as far as the fence using our shooting sticks as a walking stick-crutch before being in excruciating pain which actually is as I have a very high pain tolerance. I climbed the fence and had to wait for my wife to get the truck and return to get me.
And now I'm sitting home this morning reading threads on CGN with my ankle bandaged, elevated and iced waiting for my doctors office to open to see if she will send me for some X-Rays at a local clinic or just tell me to go sit for hours in Emerg, lol. I don't think I've broken anything but I want to get checked out to be certain. I am extremely thankful I did not tear my artificial knee out of the socket. That would not be good for sure! As a bonus I still have the canes I had purchased when I had my knees replaced. I was going to donate them to the local health authority but never got around to it.
Hopefully I haven't written off our deer season. We have 6 mule deer tags and 2 wt tags between us and it would be nice to fill at least one each. I am sure this news will please at least one CGN'r as he'll be glad I'm not out there shooting immature deer for at least a few days!
Here is a pic of the bandaged trophy ankle! I wonder what it measures? And do ankles go by green score or is there a drying period?!
After a bit of maneuvering I was able to free my foot from my boot and leg from the hole. I laid back on my backpack for a second then rolled onto my side to pull my boot out of the hole to put back on my foot all the while keeping my bootless foot elevated free of the snow to keep dry. I could not budge my boot! Man was it wedged in there something wierd! After what seemed about two minutes of twisting and pulling I finally had my boot free'd of the hole and once more rolled onto my backpack and proceeded to put my boot back on. I whispered to my wife "ouch" and muffled a bit of a chuckle as I was still trying to remain in steatlh mode to sneak into the blind well before shooting time. We continued on, my ankle feeling a bit tender and at the gate leading to the bush discovered it wired shut so up and over we went and continued to the blind. We got settled in and as time passed I could feel my right boot getting tighter and tighter and I started to feel a small amount of pain. After about a 3.5 hour sit without seeing anything moving except geese we decided to call it a morning and head home with plans to sit at another blind we have located on another farm a few miles away. Well I was able to make it about as far as the fence using our shooting sticks as a walking stick-crutch before being in excruciating pain which actually is as I have a very high pain tolerance. I climbed the fence and had to wait for my wife to get the truck and return to get me.
And now I'm sitting home this morning reading threads on CGN with my ankle bandaged, elevated and iced waiting for my doctors office to open to see if she will send me for some X-Rays at a local clinic or just tell me to go sit for hours in Emerg, lol. I don't think I've broken anything but I want to get checked out to be certain. I am extremely thankful I did not tear my artificial knee out of the socket. That would not be good for sure! As a bonus I still have the canes I had purchased when I had my knees replaced. I was going to donate them to the local health authority but never got around to it.
Hopefully I haven't written off our deer season. We have 6 mule deer tags and 2 wt tags between us and it would be nice to fill at least one each. I am sure this news will please at least one CGN'r as he'll be glad I'm not out there shooting immature deer for at least a few days!

Here is a pic of the bandaged trophy ankle! I wonder what it measures? And do ankles go by green score or is there a drying period?!
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