One way of getting unstuck is the same way farmers can use to get farm equipment from out of the mud. Keep a small length of 2 by 4 in your car. Use a ratchet tie and ratchet the 2 by 4 to a tire. The 2 by 4 will give you the best friction to get unstuck. Just move forward very very slowly until you can get into a good area that will allow your tires a better grip. Might even be a good way of getting out of a ditch on the side of the road. Put on all of your driving tires and drive very slowly in a straight line. Kind of like putting tank tracks on your car when needed. That’s what really helps give regular tires more traction (the width of the tires). If you don’t have any 2 by 4 just use some rope and tie a branch to the tire. The survival expert Creek Stewart’s Grandfather Would do this to his farm tractors, stuck in the field. Tie anything like a 2 x 4 or branch to drive wheels. That’s why you really get your traction, the width of what connects to the ground.
In a really bad situation you could use the entire length of the 2 by 4 on your rear tires. Not only to give 1000% more traction but to help spread out the weight of the vehicle over the maximum amount of area. That’s the bad part of just spinning your tires, spinning them just digs you even deeper and deeper into a bad situation. Using the 2 by 4s keeps you on top.
Hi there I live in Ontario and there is a Catahoula for adoption. That’s six months old. I’ve been researching extensively I’m going to meet him in a few days. His name is Winston. I am a hunter at times and I’ve had many dogs in my life. Is there any great advice that you could give over and above this video? I realize they’re high energy dog. They love the water. They love to track the very independent and can be stubborn. Just wondering if you have any advice to give this puppy is six months old and he seems like a sweetheart and shouldn’t live his life in a shelter. I’ve trained other dogs like Meremma‘s in Maremma Pyrenees cross in my beautiful Loki dog, passed away this past March.
New to the climber world and put it to use this hunting season. ru-vid.comUgkxlQ7TDIrnnSXXbRgFFaxqwullRJJIuYAs I felt safe while climbing up and down a tree. It did take some time getting used to climbing and descending the tree. Once I figured it out I was comfortable going in climbing a tree knowing I was going to be up a tree quickly and most importantly quite not scaring every deer out of my area. I am 6’2” and 240 lbs, fit and comfort were great. I bow hunt and found no issues hunting from it. It is a little bulky to carry in and out of the woods vs some of the smaller open front climbers but I thought it was worth the bulk/weight due to ease of climbing (using the rail to sit on) and comfort for long sits.
This is really awesome! I just recently discovered the breed and about two weeks ago got my first catahoula at 6 weeks old. I have been wanting a hunting partner for a few years now and really feel like I found him. Do you have any recommendations on how to start them out for this kind of training, or obedience in general?
Went through 2 sets of these. Hate them! Had to cut them loose after each time and they are useless especially in deep snow and slush. Tore the plastic of my front wheel well. Been nothing but trouble. Junk
im a solo snow plow operator and i've been stuck a few times. if i can shovel for 5-10 minutes thats quickest (usually combines with sand/salt i carry) when im really buried i've used these and they do work. HOWEVER... these thing get LOCKED on. i had to get a huge flat head screw driver and pry them sum bitches off. maybe put them on a little loose, don't cinch them done at all.
Great job and told me just what I wanted to know since I'm new to this ammo. Surprised to see that according to the Hornady charts I can get better than 6.5 Cr performance out of both my 30-06 and 270 bolt guns, amazing. Will be buying a few boxes of the SST for testing before deer season this year.
I just switched to Hornady red tips in my 30-06. I killed a buck at around 80 yards. He was dead before he hit the ground. No suffering, no tracking just the way I like it.
Don’t like a stand u gotta stand the whole time the hell with that. U gonna stand on your feet and hardly move for hrs? No enjoyment there more like torture.☹️
Just stood up my first stand today. First time hunter at 47 years old, this season. I didn’t know what I was doing and made it way harder than it needed to be with safety measures, but this gives me yet a more efficient approach for the next stand, and still plenty safe. Cheers!