Friday, September 22, 2023
Thursday, September 21, 2023
The pause that refreshes.
Sunday, September 17, 2023
Lex Anteinternet: Rediscovering the obvious: Diet and hunting, fishing and gardening
Rediscovering the obvious: Diet and hunting, fishing and gardening
Friday, September 15, 2023
Lex Anteinternet: Today is a poor day for Outdoor Fitness
Today is a poor day for Outdoor Fitness
Thursday, September 14, 2023
Wednesday, September 13, 2023
Lex Anteinternet: The ignorance of vegetarians
The ignorance of vegetarians
One of the real negative impacts, indeed dangers, in the increasing urbanization of the Western World's population is that it has given rise to a sanctimonious myths based on wholesale ignorance of food production and nature. One of the biggest of these is that it's "green" or "kind" to be a vegetarian, or beyond that a "vegan".
In actuality, the opposite is quite true. If a person really wanted to be kind to the planet, and still eat, what they'd be is a hunter, not a vegetarian, and certainly not a vegan. Or they'd hunt, gather, and plant a little garden. That's about as green as you can get.
The basis for the vegan myth is apparently a view that vegetable farming is kind to the land, and that by being a vegetarian you are not responsible for the deaths of any animals.
Taking the latter part of that first, that's far, far, from the truth. In fact, all farmers kill animals, and all farming kills animals. It is not possible to be a farmer without killing something, even by accident. Tractors combine through snakes, birds and deer, just to give one example. Vermin are killed by necessity, sometimes through the agents of another animals. And things get killed hauling things to and fro. Indeed, while I don't know for certain, I'd wager that farmers, kill far, far, far more animals than hunters do every year. No farmer, of any kind, doesn't kill something, and probably a fair number of somethings.
Eat your whole natural wheat bagel and imagine otherwise, but there's some dead deer DNA in there somewhere. Probably some dead rabbit dna, some mice dna, and a few bird dnas as well.
Nor is farming environmentally benign. Some farming improves the land, some does the opposite, but it is not possible to raise a crop without altering it. One of the prime alterations is that the surface of the land isn't what it once was, so whatever animal once lived there probably doesn't the same way. Farming increases forage for some things, and decreases it for others, but it doesn't leave things in a state of nature.
Now, I'm not dissing farmers by mentioning this, they know it. It's the ignorant self satisfied person eating a bowl of all natural oats that I'm laughing at? Natural? Was it wild and picked up by a gatherer? No. Did something die to get it to you. Undoubtedly yes. It is natural in that man is a natural farmer, but it also wasn't raised fee of any animal deaths, and if it was grown by somebody you didn't see grow it, fossil fuels were used to get it and produce it.
Of all farming, I'd note, it's animal farming, ie., ranching, that has the smallest environmental impact, as all it does is put large animals out where there were otherwise large animals. They probably aren't the same, to be sure, but there's no plowing or reaping involved. There may be haying, but that's relatively benign, but not purely so, as well.
Again, I'm not criticizing farmers and ranchers, and I am one. But I am amazed by the extent to which certain people think they're morally superior because they don't eat meat. They actually do eat meat, they just don't realize it's in there. And they're causing greater acreage per man to be tilled to feed them personally. They don't know that, as they're ignorant. And they're ignorant, as their exposure to the real world is lacking.
Tuesday, September 12, 2023
Dove Opener
The dog found a turkey carcass.
Two doves, with lots of shooting.
Monday, September 11, 2023
Alaska crab fisheries will be closed this season.
They were partially closed last year.
Tuesday, September 5, 2023
Blog Mirror: Scientists finally know why Germany’s wild boar are surprisingly radioactive
Sunday, September 3, 2023
Fishing season is over, and hunting season has begun.
Friday, September 1, 2023
Give a student a hand: Coyote - Badger Relationship Project
Give her a hand:
Coyote - Badger Relationship Project
Tuesday, August 29, 2023
Lex Anteinternet: Munson Last Boots, or how I became a hipster and didn't even know it. And reflections what hipster affectations mean.
Munson Last Boots, or how I became a hipster and didn't even know it. And reflections what hipster affectations mean.
In 1902 the U.S. Army replaced the last of its 19th Century type of box toes boots with a new, more modern "shoe". That year, the Army adopted more modern, round toe, boot with a toe cap. It also adopted it in a new color, or actually an absence of a color, in that the leather for the new "shoe" was "neat", i.e., no color at all, other than the natural one. Polishing rapidly gave it a light brown color which people generally think is russet and indeed it does resemble the color of a russet potato.

The M1948 was another Munson last boot but it was based on the M1942 Paratrooper boot. That boot was, yet again, a Monson last boot and is widely regarded by many as one of the most comfortable military boots every made. A highly coveted boot, it technically was slated for replacement after being in use for only a year by the M1943 Combat Boot. However, its close association with paratroopers managed to keep the boot from going into extinction and its still around as a dress item, but not a combat item, for paratroopers today.

And it isn't the first time within the last seventy years this has happened, but you can't find examples of this, before that, of which I'm aware.
In the 1950s, now thought of as the epitome of clean cut, there was something going on that angled in this direction, although imperfectly. Blue jeans had generally been the trousers of manual and agricultural labor. Men wearing only t-shirts were generally hard at work. Leather jackets had a strong association with the working class (leather was obviously much cheaper then) and, due to World War Two, with pilots. Cowboy boots retained their association (as they still do) with cowboys. All of these items came into the affectation of rebellious youth at that time. So, at a time when American industry was still very strong, but the World War Two generation was moving rapidly towards urbanization and while collar employment, American youth was affecting a rural and industrial style, and this at the same time that their immediate elders were becoming "The Man In The Gray Flannel Suit".
This continued in the 1960s. Looked back at now styles of the 1960s and early 1970s were outlandish, but they're also a bit of a clue on how what was started in the 1950s kept on keeping on. An easy, if not perfect, way to look at this is to view the film Easy Rider, which came out in 1969. Quite a few of the styles depicted in the film, while 60ish, are highly rural. Broad brimmed hats, jeans recalling Spanish America, and cowboy boots are found throughout the film. Taking another example, Jimi Hendrix, the high point of music form the 1960s, wore a style that very heavily recalled the appearance of the Californio, i.e., Caballero, of the 19th Century.
By the late 1970s and early 1980s, this style had yielded, in some youth circles, to a style based on hiking gear, which is an odd thing to consider now. The style was so common that when I was at the University of Wyoming in the 1980s I recall seeing an Army ROTC recruiting advertisement in the student newspaper showing three cartoon students, two men and one woman, wearing down vests, jeans, and classic mountaineering boots (of the type I still have, but which we don't see much anymore, and which we called "waffle stompers") with the catchphrase "And you say you don't like uniforms?". That this clothing style was so dominant amongst some youth that Army ROTC could use it as a recruiting platform says something.
But what does it say?
Well, to get back to theme that's occurred here quite a bit in recent months, or even in the last couple of years, I think it expresses a desire to go back.
And I think that's because people don't much like the glass and steel world they built.
When a young man, with a possible intended, is walking down 16th Street in Denver looking like he's on the way to the cook shack at a Michigan lumber camp in 1928, or on his way to the feed store in 1939, I think it's saying something, and saying it pretty loudly.
Even if he doesn't realize it.
Saturday, August 26, 2023
Lex Anteinternet: Poster Saturday. Bears are dangerous.
Saturday, August 19, 2023
Lex Anteinternet: Southern Rockies Nature Blog: Blog Stew with Mount...
Thursday, August 17, 2023
Sunday, August 13, 2023
Tuesday, August 8, 2023
Blog Mirror: Hunting Ducks Over Cattle: The Trained Waterfowling Steers of Texas
Hunting Ducks Over Cattle: The Trained Waterfowling Steers of Texas
Sunday, August 6, 2023
Blog Mirror: Karelian Bear Dogs Can Fend Off Grizzlies, But Are Also Friendly
Tuesday, July 18, 2023
Lex Anteinternet: Blog Mirror: ATV Trails Could Boost Wyoming Econo...
Blog Mirror: ATV Trails Could Boost Wyoming Economy, But Also Trespassing And Traffic
In a world in which human technology has made it increasingly easy for the lazy and inconsiderate to go anywhere, to the detriment of nature, the natural world, and a sense of being in nature, do we really need this BS?
ATV Trails Could Boost Wyoming Economy, But Also Trespassing And Traffic
One of the best, and most condemned, actions in the last 30 years was making a lot of rural areas "roadless" and taking out roads. Just recently, an area I've fished for 60 years had its access roads cut off and made a "walk in area", and its been great. The too lazy to walk have gone elsewhere.
I know that, living in Wyoming, a person is supposed to believe that ATVs don't damage anything, that there's no chance at all that petroleum is harmful in any way to anything whatsoever, and that Chuck Gray knows something about Arizona's last election, but ATVs are a menace. Along with cell phones, if I could wish them all away to the deepest part of the Mariana Trench, I'd do it. I can't, of course, but along with routinely killing their users, they're just bad in every single way, and I mean every single way.
Enough of this already.
Saturday, July 15, 2023
Hiking back to the beaver ponds.
A lack of the land ethic in office.
Back when I was 18 years old and first registered to vote, I registered as a Republican. The first President I voted for was Ronald Reagan....