I was blown away when I saw on the underwater camera while icefishing kokanee on the bottom digging for blood worms... another great informative video Tyler.
I sell bearing and pt components. I just bought this and assembled. The bearings are a 30205 metric cup and cone ( tapered bearing and race ) set. Get Timken.
Perfect video for what I need. I have a similar fishing old town kayak and wanted to do exactly what you have done THANKS. With your axle upgrade, can this support and larger hub/wheel bearing for a larger tire? I would prefer to get the largest tire possible for the trailer. Good luck fishing...
Not fair until you hit a stump or rock with the new axle to compare. I've seen really good axles bend after hitting an object. I've carried 2000 pounds on my HB trailer and have used it a lot. I'm still impressed with it's performance. Although haven't tried hitting a rock with the axle yet. I don't think any axle is built to withstand wacking a rock
I found they are 20-30 feet away from creeks, far, far away from pine needles. And always near oval, tear drop leaves. No luck around oak or maple leaves. Found my first this year, after 3-4 years of looking
Thanks for getting straight to the point- perfect for a beginner like myself, who gets lost in the terminology some more experienced hunters narrate their video with. Having the markers and guidance of nearby plants is great! Happy hunting (and love to see your boy out bonding through the experience:) get em started young!)
Here in Nebraska the start of the season can happen any time from the last half of March to first half of April and last as long as up to June. By June it’s all over with, unless you’re really lucky. Interesting story, I was out pheasant hunting with my old bird dog Boo, 2nd week of November this particular year, and we stopped to rest atop a hill with a small patch of pine trees, some of which were cedars, and I found a dammed morel mushroom that day ! I just absolutely could not believe it ! I bent over to pick it, and once I got it between my fingers I could tell it was dried - hard, but perfectly preserved. Great job taking the kids with ya. My dad started taking us when I was around 5. He always said more eyes on the ground equals more mushrooms. Good luck hunting brother
No no no this is such vague advice. Don't listen to this advice people. Morels grow off host trees primarily. You can go look across five counties of flood planes and never see one. Follow the host trees like elms and tulip poplar. START there ! Go to a place where there is mixed hardwoods, a good combination of sun, shade, and water such as trails along rivers. Where there is ground disturbance, sun, shade and water AND the host trees, you WILL find morels in these areas. That you can bank on ! Trail spot once you find these areas. Trust me. Focus on the southern sides of the hills early on and after that when most tree flowers are blossoming it's prime time for morels. They are large and prime at this time. After it rains go look ! Contrary to popular belief they do not grow huge overnight because of rain, you will have success after rain because of contrast. You can see the mature morels much easier in a damp Forrest. Best time to look, especially for a beginner !
This really isn't bad advice. Elms and tulip poplar are great out east. Burn morels in conifer forest out west are wild! However, there are species that are symbiotic with grass(some mushroom growers have figured this out and grow morels I'm bulk now). This all being said, my earliest spot that I find morchella diminutiva grow on the side of a gravel road with no host trees that would make sense in the area. Morel of the story... haha... mushrooms do what they want! Learn all the different angles and have some fun with it!!!
@@davidguelette7036 Lyme is bacterial it’s not a virus and it’s antibiotics resistant and is dormant in the human body kinda similiar to autoimmune diseases. that’s why it’s hard to diagnose. and treatment is usually consists of just treating your symptoms not the actual disease.
Tall grass in a meadow type setting with a creek, I could smell them and kept going back through finally felt something hit my foot and saw a head peeking out of the grass,ended up with around 90 that had long stems under the grass 6-8 inch stems all under tall grass.. yummy!
You have to think about it in terms of boundaries or wall barricades where the mycelium root fingers are stopped from spreading and wherever you can find that you'll find the fruit ie shrooms. So fencerows with old post fire slash burn areas creek edges places like that. Even transitioning areas from woods to pasture. Some say I'm wrong but because they find them by dead trees elm or ash but the reason for that is the tree the mycelium has the relationship with has died triggering the mycelium to fruit so as to spread spores and create new mycelium to continue on reproducing. So the myceliums way of reproducing is to fruit or pop up a shrooms to spread spores to root new myceliums.