Introduce yourself

Hello Everyone, My name is Jeff, I am a 61yo retired firefighter, and a born-again Christian. I manage about 300 acres in South Central Kentucky. While I am new to this forum I have been hunting and trying to practice QDM for going on 30 years in the South. I have primarily used the disc, spread and cover methods and had good success, but I just recently finally purchased a no-till drill and will be trying it out this spring. I have been involved with the Chestnut reintroduction in my area for 20 years now and also trying to plant heirloom varieties of fruit and nut trees on the property. I am no expert, but have a lot of trial and error experience, so I am hoping you guys can help cut down on some of that with the no-till drill..... I will be asking soon..
Welcome to the site. I’m very interested to see how the Saya works out for you. I, too, am in South Central KY and assume that you and I would have similar soils. I’ve been kicking around the idea of getting one of these but haven’t come to grips giving up my disk just yet. Please keep us posted.
 
So i wont share too mutch personal info, i hope you dont mind. My friends call me karhumies (bear man) on account of my frame and facial hair, a quick conversion puts me at 6.6 and 340lb. As you might have guessed iam from Finnland where we owe many thanks for sending over those white tail deer in the 1900s! they thrived here. I live in a place where the sun either never sets or never rises depending on the season and winters dip so low your tinkle turns to snow before it hits the ground. I have the philosophy to use every part of the animal including intestines, bones, hides and hoofs. English is a third language so if my writings seem a bit odd keep that in mind
 
So i wont share too mutch personal info, i hope you dont mind. My friends call me karhumies (bear man) on account of my frame and facial hair, a quick conversion puts me at 6.6 and 340lb. As you might have guessed iam from Finnland where we owe many thanks for sending over those white tail deer in the 1900s! they thrived here. I live in a place where the sun either never sets or never rises depending on the season and winters dip so low your tinkle turns to snow before it hits the ground. I have the philosophy to use every part of the animal including intestines, bones, hides and hoofs. English is a third language so if my writings seem a bit odd keep that in mind
You sound like a fellow hunter to me. Welcome to the forum.
 
So i wont share too mutch personal info, i hope you dont mind. My friends call me karhumies (bear man) on account of my frame and facial hair, a quick conversion puts me at 6.6 and 340lb. As you might have guessed iam from Finnland where we owe many thanks for sending over those white tail deer in the 1900s! they thrived here. I live in a place where the sun either never sets or never rises depending on the season and winters dip so low your tinkle turns to snow before it hits the ground. I have the philosophy to use every part of the animal including intestines, bones, hides and hoofs. English is a third language so if my writings seem a bit odd keep that in mind
Welcome, I'd love to see some pictures from Finnland. You're welcome for the whitetailed deer, and thanks for the reindeer you sent to North America, of course we call them caribou.
 
Welcome, I'd love to see some pictures from Finnland. You're welcome for the whitetailed deer, and thanks for the reindeer you sent to North America, of course we call them caribou.

The area i live has about every type of terrain in the country, its right in the borderzone where forests turn to barren swamps as far as the eye can see. This also makes hunting extremely dynamic as i may start my hunt in dense spruce forest only to end up taking a 300 meter shot in the swamps and having to haul my catch trough knee deep peat bogs. Also alot of farmland wich is where i spend my early season and early summer thinning out brown hair and racoondogs for the farmers.
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The area i live has about every type of terrain in the country, its right in the borderzone where forests turn to barren swamps as far as the eye can see. This also makes hunting extremely dynamic as i may start my hunt in dense spruce forest only to end up taking a 300 meter shot in the swamps and having to haul my catch trough knee deep peat bogs. Also alot of farmland wich is where i spend my early season and early summer thinning out brown hair and racoondogs for the farmers.
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Just beautiful country. Looks like a hunters paradise.
 
Just beautiful country. Looks like a hunters paradise.
the closest analog would be if you compressed north america minus the hot regions. We have a massive difference in geography across the country, from deer and boar invested plains and farmland with patchy woodland in uusima, to rocky coastlines and grainfields as far as the eye can see in vasaa to dense ancient forest (korpi we call it) where the sun barely reaches the forest floor in karjala, to a maze of lakes and rivers seperated by dense evergreen in pirkanmaa and endless peat swamp with trees 100 years old the size of a sapling followed by barren mountains as you travel up lappi. I live right in the middle
 
Hello, my name is John and I am a new hunter. I am currently living in Charlottesville, Virginia. I have a love for the woods and outdoors and hope to meet some new buddies to share that same passion with!
Welcome to the neighborhood! I plan to retire about20 minutes out of Cville.
 
The area i live has about every type of terrain in the country, its right in the borderzone where forests turn to barren swamps as far as the eye can see. This also makes hunting extremely dynamic as i may start my hunt in dense spruce forest only to end up taking a 300 meter shot in the swamps and having to haul my catch trough knee deep peat bogs. Also alot of farmland wich is where i spend my early season and early summer thinning out brown hair and racoondogs for the farmers.
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I see Finland has also been invaded by wind turbines. Do you also have solar panels taking over? Close to one of my hunting lands they are putting in 700 acres of solar on prime farmland :(
 
I see Finland has also been invaded by wind turbines. Do you also have solar panels taking over? Close to one of my hunting lands they are putting in 700 acres of solar on prime farmland :(
haha what sun? not a good investment out here. A few companies use them to power their office but more as a "look at us being green" statement. Most of our electricity is made by burning stuff
 
haha what sun? not a good investment out here. A few companies use them to power their office but more as a "look at us being green" statement. Most of our electricity is made by burning stuff
Yes, I forget how far north you are, and how the European climate is warmer than ours. If you live in the middle of Finland, you are close to 64 degrees north. In North America there's there's not many people living further than 51 degrees north, but the European equivalent location to this would be down in Belgium somewhere. I've hunted in Canada at 51 degrees north in November and some days I needed to wear all the clothing I had along to stay warm, and that's the reason that more than 90 percent of the Canadian population lives within 150 miles of the US border, south of 51 degrees.
 
Yes, I forget how far north you are, and how the European climate is warmer than ours. If you live in the middle of Finland, you are close to 64 degrees north. In North America there's there's not many people living further than 51 degrees north, but the European equivalent location to this would be down in Belgium somewhere. I've hunted in Canada at 51 degrees north in November and some days I needed to wear all the clothing I had along to stay warm, and that's the reason that more than 90 percent of the Canadian population lives within 150 miles of the US border, south of 51 degrees.
at the moment its negative 13 celcius with about 40cm of snow. daylight is about 5 hours. It will drop all the way to -30 or even -35 soon with no actual sun above the horizon.
 
at the moment its negative 13 celcius with about 40cm of snow. daylight is about 5 hours. It will drop all the way to -30 or even -35 soon with no actual sun above the horizon.
If it's colder than negative 13 Celsius at daylight we don't go out building barns that day. Here in Pennsylvania that happens about 1 day every winter.
 
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