Outdoor Ramblings
Welcome to my outdoor ramblings page. What you’ll find here is, as the name implies, a random collection of my thoughts, attitudes, and experiences in the outdoor world.
None of them are particularly long. Unlike my articles, which try to provide all the information you might want on a subject, these are just down-and-dirty thoughts and opinions. Or, sometimes, how-to instructions for an outdoor project. As the name implies, outdoor ramblings.
You’ll also notice something else: The outdoor ramblings and musings you find here are exactly like the ones on my blog page. There’s a reason for that repetition: some of you asked for it.
The program we use for this web page has a major flaw, when it comes to the blogs. It doesn’t archive them. Only a limted number of entries appear on the page, and then they drop off the bottom, forever disappearing into cyberspace.
Fishing the Legendary Outer Banks
Animal Antics in the Outdoors
The Pinfire Shotgun: Remembering the Past
Fishing: The Next Generationi
In Search of an Outdoor Club
Varmint Hunting: Mown Lawns and Whistle Pigs
Fishing Trip: Up a Little River
Trail Running: Hikers Beware
How to Pattern a Shotgun
Empty Outdoor Questions
Tips for Creating the Perfect Hunting Lease
Fishing Guides - A Worthwhile Investment
Just Fishing
Fishing Flies: Getting a Hook On It
Cast Your Own Sinkers
Sea View - Fishing Report
Frogging We Will Go
A Different Fly Fishing Style
Young Guns - Youth Hunting and Shooting Programs
Take No Wounded
Fishing Skinny Water
Sand Spikes - Make Your Own
Outdoor Etiquette
Apparently, many of you go back to reread my blog entries, and find it disconcerting when they’re no longer there. Typical was the reader who emailed me about making sand spikes for surf fishing.
“I remember seeing the instructions in your blog,” he said. “and that you said something about how to flange the top of the pipe. But when I went looking for it, it was gone.”
Naturally, I sent him the information he was looking for. But he wasn’t the only reader to mention the loss of data. Nor is it always the how-to info that readers look for. One reader tried to share my opinion of catch & release with a friend across the country. “I was sort of embarrassed when he emailed me back, sarcastically wondering if we were looking at the same site” The up side is that after I emailed a copy of that blog to his friend, his buddy became a regular reader. But that didn’t detract from the basic problem.
So we’ve decided to convert the blog entries to a web-page. That way, the information will always be here, available to be reread whenever you wish.
You’ll still be able to read the entries as I post them on Brook’s Blog each day. But, in addition, they’ll be found here as well, so that you never lose any information you may be looking for.
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