Huntcamp photos

Hunting Camps

Man you gentleman have some nice camps. I don't own a camp but I was adopted by my best friends uncle and son. My friend Terry took me up to a place called Carsonville in New Brunswick and I met his uncle Grover his son Doug and grandson Ryan. Two other guys were boyhood friends of Dougs and they are like sons to Grover. Lloyd and Brian are a hoot to be around and make a weekend with them worth the trip. I am the armorer for the camp, if someone is looking for something in guns, scopes and hunting knives I usually come up with something. My job before the season starts is zero in the guns and sharpen all the hunting knives. Nobody smokes in the camp, drinks too much and gets out of hand and definitely doesn't shoot before or after the allowable hunting hours. The guys drink after hours when the guns are put away, and the cards come out. Before the season starts we all go to the camp and clean it up for the season. Clean the carpets, wash all plates and drinking implements and do any maintenance needed for the season.
I am disabled and can't pitch in as much as the other guys but I always give something to one of the camp owners. I have given guns and knives to the family members over the years in appreciation of being welcomed into the family. It's the place to be the weekend before the season opens for deer. The guys are usually involved in a Moose hunt prior to the deer season. They hunt ducks on the St John river and they save a good size deer roast from last years hunt for the Sunday feast. Doug cooks a Moose, and Deer roast in the oven along with marinated duck breasts on the barbecue.
It's probably the best meal of the year. Everyone is excited about the opening day and most don't want to shoot anything early in the season and spoil the hunt for themselves. If the eight hunters get two or three deer in the area we stop hunting and just go out and observe. It might sound stupid but we want to make sure the deer aren't over hunted, and we don't tell others where the big ones are. Let the big ones multiply so we have a strong deer population. I love going to the camp, it's quiet during the day and no one smokes in the camp. The sound of the wood crackling in the camp stove the sound of laughter and friendly teasing makes the camp better than Christmas.
 
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You have to wait a while for the pics to come up.............

Those are actually four camps, from four years, top to bottom:

Howe Island Trailer Trash Team (HITT Team), Howe Island Ont, 2004

Green Canoe Irregulars, Haliburton Ont, 2003

Rich's Renegades, near Cooper, Ont, 2005

The new camp, not yet named, interim "Camp Swampy" last weekend

Doug
 
Doug said:
You have to wait a while for the pics to come up.............

Those are actually four camps, from four years, top to bottom:

Howe Island Trailer Trash Team (HITT Team), Howe Island Ont, 2004

Green Canoe Irregulars, Haliburton Ont, 2003

Rich's Renegades, near Cooper, Ont, 2005

The new camp, not yet named, interim "Camp Swampy" last weekend

Doug


but how do you,s always get to shoot the same ugly looking bear, that we see in the middle of the group photo,s
 
yeah, he's a rough old bear that one, but the lads in the camp have kind of adopted me, I mean him............

;-)

Doug
 
nahhh, that weren't him, casull, our mascot does not smell near as pretty as a grizzly bear that has been into the salmon for a week!!!!

But he might be as mean.............

;-)

Doug
 
albayo said:
Man you gentleman have some nice camps. I don't own a camp but I was adopted by my best friends uncle and son. My friend Terry took me up to a place called Carsonville in New Brunswick and I met his uncle Grover his son Doug and grandson Ryan. Two other guys were boyhood friends of Dougs and they are like sons to Grover. Lloyd and Brian are a hoot to be around and make a weekend with them worth the trip. I am the armorer for the camp, if someone is looking for something in guns, scopes and hunting knives I usually come up with something. My job before the season starts is zero in the guns and sharpen all the hunting knives. Nobody smokes in the camp, drinks too much and gets out of hand and definitely doesn't shoot before or after the allowable hunting hours. The guys drink after hours when the guns are put away, and the cards come out. Before the season starts we all go to the camp and clean it up for the season. Clean the carpets, wash all plates and drinking implements and do any maintenance needed for the season.
I am disabled and can't pitch in as much as the other guys but I always give something to one of the camp owners. I have given guns and knives to the family members over the years in appreciation of being welcomed into the family. It's the place to be the weekend before the season opens for deer. The guys are usually involved in a Moose hunt prior to the deer season. They hunt ducks on the St John river and they save a good size deer roast from last years hunt for the Sunday feast. Doug cooks a Moose, and Deer roast in the oven along with marinated duck breasts on the barbecue.
It's probably the best meal of the year. Everyone is excited about the opening day and most don't want to shoot anything early in the season and spoil the hunt for themselves. If the eight hunters get two or three deer in the area we stop hunting and just go out and observe. It might sound stupid but we want to make sure the deer aren't over hunted, and we don't tell others where the big ones are. Let the big ones multiply so we have a strong deer population. I love going to the camp, it's quiet during the day and no one smokes in the camp. The sound of the wood crackling in the camp stove the sound of laughter and friendly teasing makes the camp better than Christmas.
You don't sound disabled, bud! Appreciating, respecting and enjoying life are what it's all about. The hunt camp is the epitome of all of those things.
I pity those that sit in traffic in the morning, sit in a cubicle all day, sit in traffic in the evening, get "home", shovel tv dinners down their throats, watch reality shows, go to bed and repeat. Vacation in some "all inclusive resort" in a third world country, etc., etc., etc...
No, you aren't disabled. The rest of society is.
 
albayo said:
Man you gentleman have some nice camps. I don't own a camp but I was adopted by my best friends uncle and son. My friend Terry took me up to a place called Carsonville in New Brunswick and I met his uncle Grover his son Doug and grandson Ryan. Two other guys were boyhood friends of Dougs and they are like sons to Grover. Lloyd and Brian are a hoot to be around and make a weekend with them worth the trip. I am the armorer for the camp, if someone is looking for something in guns, scopes and hunting knives I usually come up with something. My job before the season starts is zero in the guns and sharpen all the hunting knives. Nobody smokes in the camp, drinks too much and gets out of hand and definitely doesn't shoot before or after the allowable hunting hours. The guys drink after hours when the guns are put away, and the cards come out. Before the season starts we all go to the camp and clean it up for the season. Clean the carpets, wash all plates and drinking implements and do any maintenance needed for the season.
I am disabled and can't pitch in as much as the other guys but I always give something to one of the camp owners. I have given guns and knives to the family members over the years in appreciation of being welcomed into the family. It's the place to be the weekend before the season opens for deer. The guys are usually involved in a Moose hunt prior to the deer season. They hunt ducks on the St John river and they save a good size deer roast from last years hunt for the Sunday feast. Doug cooks a Moose, and Deer roast in the oven along with marinated duck breasts on the barbecue.
It's probably the best meal of the year. Everyone is excited about the opening day and most don't want to shoot anything early in the season and spoil the hunt for themselves. If the eight hunters get two or three deer in the area we stop hunting and just go out and observe. It might sound stupid but we want to make sure the deer aren't over hunted, and we don't tell others where the big ones are. Let the big ones multiply so we have a strong deer population. I love going to the camp, it's quiet during the day and no one smokes in the camp. The sound of the wood crackling in the camp stove the sound of laughter and friendly teasing makes the camp better than Christmas.


you sir :) have found the camp we been looking for years to find.... you do not have a handy cap...its the healthy one,s that have it..
 
Doug- that's a pretty fancy looking camp. Vinyl siding, aluminun soffit, a real door, windows. Don't forget to give me a buzz sometime. I'll come down and give you a hand cutting wood or whatever. PS forgot to mention on the phone last time we talked. That buck I missed the day you and I went out at my camp wasn't the only deer I missed that week.
 
back to scar............yes, she's a beauty all right, and big too! Not as big as Smith's camp back of Lanark, but I am not a millionaire either!

I think I "may" have mentioned in another thread that if people had hit half the deers you have missed they would be mighty successful hunters........

;-)

Doug
 
Doug said:
nahhh, that weren't him, casull, our mascot does not smell near as pretty as a grizzly bear that has been into the salmon for a week!!!!

But he might be as mean.............

;-)

Doug
is that before or after the jug of rum:p
 
this is a BC special,280+sq.ft and poratble.We have had it for 7-8yrs now{huntbud and I own} 2 others tag along every year.Usually 1 week in Oct,2 weeks in Nov.
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