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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Long Beards & Spurs
No good deed goes unpunished
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<blockquote data-quote="megalomaniac" data-source="post: 5867726" data-attributes="member: 2805"><p>Corn chops. That's what the baiters prefer.</p><p></p><p>I don't have proof he put it out, didn't see a bait pile. But why else would you be carrying a 50lb sack on your shoulder this time of the year? I suspect he has a hidden personal 'honey hole' off the beaten path.</p><p></p><p>He has been in the club 6 years, never even killed a turkey, so I'm not to worried about it, except I don't want to be around his bait if he put it out.</p><p></p><p>MS is a weird hunting culture. Bait is normalized here, although illegal. I always check the crops of the birds I kill, and a third of the public birds I've taken have bait in their crops. I was actually surprised the bird I killed yesterday only had a couple green leaves and a spider in his crop. He was running on empty.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="megalomaniac, post: 5867726, member: 2805"] Corn chops. That's what the baiters prefer. I don't have proof he put it out, didn't see a bait pile. But why else would you be carrying a 50lb sack on your shoulder this time of the year? I suspect he has a hidden personal 'honey hole' off the beaten path. He has been in the club 6 years, never even killed a turkey, so I'm not to worried about it, except I don't want to be around his bait if he put it out. MS is a weird hunting culture. Bait is normalized here, although illegal. I always check the crops of the birds I kill, and a third of the public birds I've taken have bait in their crops. I was actually surprised the bird I killed yesterday only had a couple green leaves and a spider in his crop. He was running on empty. [/QUOTE]
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No good deed goes unpunished
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