My name is Jacob Napier and I love my family, I also love to hunt and fish. I love everything out doors but most importantly I love my lord and savior Jesus Christ. Subscribe for all outdoors.
I filmed the first half of the video with my iPhone. The go pro shots were with a hero 10 and my camera is a Sony zv-1f. It’s a great camera for the price.
Jacob-since you’re going to play the clickbait game, and since I’m an avid outdoorsman, I’m taking you off of my algorithm. I will just click on”don’t show posts from this channel”, and you no longer exist.
I didn’t have an elk hunting tag. I’m in Kentucky where you have to be drawn to get a tag. I have killed a bull Elk though. It’s on my channel on my shed Tour. God bless!!
As an independent pond manager, I'll hit the high points. Hope it helps ya. 1. Only stock your pond with hatchery fish. Never bring fish to the pond from other lakes or rivers. Ever! One diseased fish can destroy a great fishery, fast. 2. Stock 50-75 bass, 3500 bluegill/shellcracker mix, 5000 fathead minnows, 5 (only five) triploid grass carp, and 100lbs of crawfish per acre. 3. Stock everything but the bass in late Fall. Stock the bass the following Spring, mid-April in the South, May up north. 4. Feed the bluegill at least 2-3 times a week with high protein floating feed. 5. Install an aerator. 6. If it's a newly built pond, or drained for restocking, lime the basin with around two tons of lime per acre. 7. Fertilize the pond 2x a year, Feb-Mar and Aug-Sept, with a quality liquid or pellet-type fertilizer. 8. After the third year, catch out (AND DO NOT RELEASE) at least 100lbs of bass under 14" per year per acre. 9. If you are in the south, do not stock northern strain bass. Some southern hatcheries only grow northern strain bass. Avoid them. Stock only F1s or Florida bass. If you're up north, stick with mostly northern bass and around 25% F1s. 10. Do this right, and you'll have 6lbrs in 3 years, and double digit bass in 5-6 years. Hope this helps someone. *********Unless your pond/lake is over 5 acres, don't bother with shad, tilapia, or crappie. If you want a crappie pond, build one just for crappie and forage.
Fertilizer run off from the fields caused a large Algae bloom Depending oxygen. Looks like blue/green algae which can be hazardous to your health and any pets/animals that may ingest or come into contact with. I see it a lot in low lying farm fields here in Illinois usually mid to late summer.
I may be wrong though my uncle was in forestry and he use to say there was a aluminum block or something of that nature you could float for all the alegy
I used muzzys for years! Great broad headed 👍. I switched from thunderheads to muzzy and was really happy, killed a lot of deer with both. I’ve been using swhackers for the past few years and have killed a couple does with them, they seem to do a good job too. I did buy some spitfires but haven’t got anything with them yet