manualofman

 

Wait, what? Did you say restoring a SEVEN year old lawn mower? I can already hear you asking it.

And yes, the answer is, shamefully, yes.

I came into possession of a 2005-2006 Cub Cadet LT1046 from my parent’s when I moved in with my girlfriend in her new house. The house which sits on an acre, is almost entirely lawn, as opposed to my parent’s old house which is almost entirely trees. That being said, I commandeered the riding lawn mower that I had been essentially the sole user of during summers home from college… as I was the sole landscaper of the household (not the financer).

Seeing as I was in college, I regrettably paid little attention to the lawn tractor when I wasn’t specifically using it to cut grass. Very little care was made to routine maintenance aside from adding more oil and emptying the bags. As the years progressed the lawn mower became less and less efficient. The chute clogged if I went a hair over an infant-paced crawl. If the grass was more than 4 inches tall, I’d have to make two passes at successively lower cutting heights just to cut it. And the belt and pulleys sounded more like grinding metal than an efficient whirr. Continue reading »

 

It’s pretty been busy lately and my lack of posting is beginning to show. I apologize for that! I’m still trying to get my other blog The Stormcrow Group really up and running, so much of my time has been devoted to that.

I have several posts in the works:

Carving Your Own Wooden Duck Decoys – I was given the opportunity to review and evaluate Tom Matus’s book Antique-Style Duck Decoy Carving by Fox Chapel Publishing. I’m still working on putting together the tools to try this hand carving wood working project. I’ve made some moves toward getting my hands on a tool set, including visiting WoodCraft of Portsmouth, NH. The fellow I talked to there, I believe his name was Scott, turned me in the right direction and showed me quite a few tools to look out for. If you’re reading this, thanks a lot, I’ll be back for sure!

Talking Turkey – Spring gobbler season is opening up soon in NH, and I’m getting set to move on this year’s season hard. I’ve got several friends who are really up for hunting with me this year, so I’m confident we will kill my first turkey come May. I am planning to document this experience in earnest.

Product Reviews – I’ve got several more personal product reviews on the way, including one on of my life’s Bucket List purchases: a pair of Red Wing boots. I’m very excited.

 

Thanks for the continued support and reading!

 

 

If you’re reading this, I take it that you read my previous guide to buying your first compound bow. If you haven’t, stop and go read it first.

Now that you have your new (new-to-you still counts), there may be parts that need upgrading. If you purchased it used, it could have been sold fully tricked out, with just a basic setup, or just a bare bow. If it’s just a bare bow, you obviously have more to purchase, and if its a basic setup, it should get you by for a few months while you start practicing.

There will come a time though, when you decide that you need to upgrade. I came to the same decision with my bow. It took me quite a while to prioritize what parts to upgrade and when. So here’s a guide I’ve put together using my own experience and planning decisions.

Upgrades In Order of Importance

Tune-Up and Set-Up

Before you even start thinking about whether or not a stabilizer will improve your accuracy, you better bring that bow to a pro-shop and get it properly set up according to your strength and draw length. You can adjust these on your own, I’ve done it. However, you have to be extra careful about maintaining the proper tiller and possibly not messing up the cam timing, especially on a binary cam bow. It can throw it all outta whack. Bringing your bow in to a shop is especially necessary if you bought this bow online or in a face to face sale. You don’t always know what the seller says about the draw length and weight is exactly correct. You could be instilling poor form while you struggle to make a bow that’s supposed to be your size work, when in reality it’s an inch too long. This whole tune-up and set up should also include a new string, serving, and center nock, if need be. A pro shop employee will be able to tell you if a new string is in order, or maybe just repairing your serving.

Continue reading »

 

 

I’ve been receiving requests for more articles similar to the one I wrote about dehydrating chicken breasts for dog treats. As those are more of a prize treat for just being a good dog, I wanted to come up with a cheaper treat recipe for all the dog trainers out there.

Anybody who does clicker training knows that you need to utilize high value treats and lots of them when trying to form a behavior. This can sometimes be an expensive and costly practice, as high value often means exotic and expensive. Regular dog kibble will rarely suffice without adding in bits of hot dog, cheese, or meat into the mix to keep your dog drooling and motivated.

After all’s said and done, you still have to worry about your little buddy’s nutrition. Loading them up on a belly full of hot dog bits and cheese is cheap and effective, but costly on their body and their bowels (prepare to leave the room after training).

I got this idea from a woman in our Nose Work class who made dog treats in a similar manner. I tweaked it slightly by first baking and dehydrating the treats to change the consistency and make them a bit safer for handling (by us humans). This recipe, with about a pound of ground turkey, will yield at least a week’s worth of treats good for training (cut up to the size of a finger nail). Kept cold and dry, they will stay pretty fresh. Just be careful as they are made of ground meat and not completely dehydrated, they can and will grow bacteria if stored improperly.

 

Ingredients

1 Pack of Ground Turkey Meat – the leaner the better, at the very least 93-7.
Nonstick cooking spray
Aluminum Foil
Wax Paper
Rolling Pin
Baking Sheet
Conventional Oven
Food Dehydrator

Continue reading »

 

So you want to learn how to tie your own flies huh? Well good on you for taking an interest in it. Not only is it a relaxing and stress reducing hobby, it’s also rewarding and mentally engaging.

Tying your own flies is not just wrapping fur, feather, and thread around a hook, hoping it looks like a bug. It requires careful study of insects and food sources, attention to details like anatomy, color, and sizing. Most of all, it requires a delicate and precise touch to master.

All that can be developed as you go, no one starts out as an expert. Starting can be very difficult, especially if you’re starting off completely alone and without any guide, which is how I did it. I studied and put together my own basic fly tyer’s kit for under $200. I spent money on things I haven’t ended up using, and had to go back and buy things that I use all the time.

Here’s my basic kit that should get most anyone started tying and practicing. It’s broken down into 2 main groups, tools and materials.  It is put together so that you can start on some basic flies that will develop your skills and are actually used a lot (if not the most) by most fly fisher’s anyways: the wooly bugger, adam’s dry, elk hair caddis, and bead head nymph.

Tools

Vise

The fly vise is the foundation of fly tying. They run the gamut of cheap to ridiculously expensive. I don’t see myself dropping over $100 on a fly vise in the near future, especially when I’m first starting out. The vise I went with is pretty much the cheapest I found that’s still actually intended to be a fly vise, the Super AA. It’s found at J Stockard’s here. It clamps to my work desk and holds hooks tight. It’s not a rotary vise (where you can spin the hook onto material, rather than spinning material onto the hook), but you don’t NEED a rotary vise. Rotaries make tying easier and faster, but I’m not really in it for the ease or speed yet. So why drop the money? For under $15, this beginner vise does everything you need. And at that price, it’s not a big deal to upgrade later.

Scissors

Your kitchen scissors that you cut anything from cardboard to plastic won’t suffice here. Invest in a decent pair of scissors by a company like Dr. Slick and use them solely for cutting fly materials. Don’t even use them to cut the packaging containing fly materials. Keep them sharp and keep them covered and they’ll last you a long time. You can even invest in a couple and use them to cut different things. Just mark them with a piece of tape or a dab of paint.  4’’ size scissors are good for cutting hair/furs, while a pair of 3.5’’ arrow head scissors are good for snipping out finer details (like snipping excess fur/dubbing when finishing a fly)

Continue reading »

 

I’ve decided to create a new blog fully dedicated to outdoor, hunting, and shooting gear reviews. You’ll also find industry news and articles there. It’s called The Stormcrow Group, if you enjoy the gear reviews here, take a moment to check it out!

I realized that I have a passion for passing on all the research I put into buying gear. Since I read a lot of reviews, I can give pretty good reviews as well!

I’m going to lift many of the reviews I’ve already written here, but they will still remain on this blog. You’ll still find some news reviews and articles about hunting and the outdoors snuck in here and there at Manual of Man, but the topic covered on this blog will remain tied to what this blog initially intended to be.

Let me know what you think, subscribe via RSS, and connect with me on Twitter and Facebook over there!

www.stormcrowgroup.com

 

 

My first year hunting, aside from the possible duck hunting excursions over the next two weeks, has come to a close. I’ve made accomplishments, many mistakes, learned some lessons, and of course, wished I could’ve gone more.

To get the shameful business over first, the mistakes I made were mainly in planning. I’ve learned upgrading parts of your bow mid-season is a bad thing. My heart was in the right place when I decided to upgrade my fiber optic sight at the beginning of the fall archery season. What I didn’t take into consideration was the amount of time it would take me to sight in the new pins, which resulted in me breaking the silencer tubes on my rest and also playing the game of: “Is it my sight that’s off? Or is it my rest? Or maybe it’s my form?”.

Normally, this wouldn’t be a problem. But given that I’m a novice archer but a full-fledged tinkerer, hours became days which became weeks wasted on dialing in a bow that was already dialed in to start. When after-work evenings are only a few hours long and grow shorter as the daylight wanes, it was a losing battle until a free weekend could roll in. And free weekends were few and far between at the start off the season, with 3 weddings, a 10-day trip to Peru, and installing a dog fence to take priority.

But there were still days I managed to get out into the field and animals to see. None to shoot though.

Which is not necessarily a bad thing.

Luckily, I have a good friend who would come up from CT at the drop of a hat to go out with me. Although he’s not an expert hunter yet either, he does have a lot more experience than I do but he loves to learn as much as I do. And, to my advantage, likes to pass on knowledge and just be outside. We spent a lot of time swapping tips he’s learned from his own experiences as well tips I’ve just read or heard. Hopefully, I didn’t make him any dumber in the process. Thanks Scoot.

I’ll share one hunting outing that left us both feeling dumber. It was the morning of Thanksgiving and we decided that while he was up visiting his family, that we’re try to go out for some duck. We had gone out several times before, checking out ponds we had found on Google Earth that looked good. No luck there. He had found some new ponds near his house that looked promising so we decided it was worth a shot. With me waking up late, forgetting my call when I was already on my way, and then the promising pond ending up being strung over by high tension power lines, we were a bit defeated. Standing out there in the cold, holding my brand new 28” barrel Weatherby pump, we decided to head back to his house and grab our bows to look for some turkey. His father had been telling him about a group of Toms that cross through his yard every morning, the same group I’ve witnessed a few times when I drive by his house on my morning work commute.

As we pulled up the road and to his driveway, what do we see? A group of 6 big Tom’s crossing the road INTO his driveway. Yes, we actually had to wait while they crossed and wander into his front yard. We sat there dumbfounded. Although my bow was in the other car, garaunteeing there was no shot capable, we both knew we wouldn’t take one even if we could. He knew that I didn’t want my first turkey to be taken standing in a driveway at point blank range. So we sat there, trying not to laugh at their obvious low IQ,  while we called to them with the windows rolled down. Once they passed into the woods behind the house, we scrambled to get our bows and get to somewhere where we could intercept them. We waited in a spot of woods that they had clearly been using, there were sign all over the place. What once were a group of idiot turkeys and a gauranteed wild turkey dinner that evening, ended up outsmarting us. I guess our hubris got the best of us and in our confidence in that spot being THE spot, they got away.

Oh well. It made for a good story the next day.

I think as a beginner hunter, I’m still learning about myself while learning how to hunt. There is still an inner war being waged between my societal conscience and instinctual conscience. Often times, I’m left wondering which was there first? I’m also still terrified about the point in which it becomes a mile-long draw of a bow and a thousand-pound trigger release. I’m still not sure whether not getting the chance this year is for better or for worse. Will I learn more about myself come next year? Or will wintering this internal debate only let it lose the foothold I’ve dug it this fall?

I guess we’ll see in Hunting Year 2.

 

 

Music has a strange way of taking charge of your emotions. It’s also very easy to link emotions and experience to music. Some music can make you feel all emo, or bummed out, or forlorn. While other bands can make you feel pumped up, macho, and ready to kick some ass.

Here, I’ve put together a list of modern bands that will make you feel just manly. It doesn’t necessarily have to be about kicking ass and rocking out, but about being strong and respected.

The Black Keys

Akron, Ohio based rock duo The Black Keys are pretty much all over the charts right now, and for good reasons. Since the debut of their first album, The Big ComeUp, in 2002, they haven’t stopped being featured in TV shows, movies, commercials, and games. They have been the go-to bad for any scene or sentiment requiring someone to look just utterly bad ass.  Essentially, anytime you ever hear a fuzzy, wailing voice, strung out over edge guitar and tight drums. They are a tribute to the older school of rock, one of the fewer bands rekindling the passion for rock and roll that’s centered on the music making the scene. Not the scene making the music. Expect more and more big things from these, as they’ve only just begun to crack the crust of mainstream. They just put out a new album, El Camino, which you can assume has already infected your eardrums in some shape or form by now.

Continue reading »

 

Review of the Sitka Gear Bandit Mask in Open Country Optifade

 

Introduction

I wanted to purchase the Bandit Mask last year, but didn’t specifically need it at the time as I wasn’t ready to hunt yet. When spring rolled around, they were all sold out everywhere (probably from last year but they hadn’t replaced the stock yet). The same problem almost just struck again, as Sitka is out of stock on their end, and most retailers are selling out in the Open Country pattern all over the interwebs. Luckily extreme-outdoors.com still have them (these guys are based out of Utah, do guided hunts/fishing trips, and have great customer service for their online store).

As far as the reason for me purchasing it was for turkey season. As many people know, turkey hunting is a very difficult challenge concealment-wise. Some people say, if turkey could smell, there would be no way anyone could kill one. Why is this? Eye sight and hearing. Hearing, there’s not much you can do about. Be quiet and make sure your gear is quiet. But vision, there are many things.

Full up 3-D textured ground blinds, ghillie suits, face paint, camo shotguns. Pretty much anything in the hunting business that isn’t already for turkey hunting can be transformed into a turkey hunting necessity with just a camo dip. Continue reading »

 

I recently upgraded the sight on my compound bow to a 4-pin Sword Apex Hunter. I had purchased the bow used off the archerytalk.com forums and it came with an entry level Cobra 3-pin sight. It took me about a year to realize the sight wasn’t up to snuff, and decided to upgrade. If you’re still toying with the idea, go upgrade your crappy sight. It’s the nerve center of your bow, you can’t shoot when you can’t aim!

The sight, while being absolutely diesel in it’s construction, came with a pin that was a little too bright. After contacting Brandon over at Sword (great guy), they told me that the fiber optic thread was not clipped close enough to the pin hole. They recommended that I clip the end of the thread and use a lighter to very carefully flare the end so it would not pull back through the hole.

I, unfortunately, held it too close and “killed” the pin. Which means I burned the fiber optic which causes the end of the fiber optic to emit as much light. I therefore took it apart and pulled more line through and fixed the pin. In the process, I accidentally broke two threads while trying to pull more slack from the wrapped threads. After fixing one correctly, I figured I’d document and explain how to do it while I fixed the other one.

Below, you can see how the top pin (in green) emits almost zero light, since the thread was broken. The only light it is pulling from is the 2 inches of thread left after the break, rather than 12” of thread in the wrap.

Continue reading »

© 2011 Manual of Man I don't claim to be an expert at anything, don't consider me one. Attempts at anything I've done, advise, or promote are at your own risk! Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha