Scrounging Firewood (and other stuff)

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My sister moved up to the Rochester area in nothern NY. It was my first time being there this past memorial day. I was in utter shock about how beautiful it was there. Her inlaws have a lake house on one of the finger lakes, lake chucka, and it was great. The thing that I was astonished by was the amount of houses on that lake. There was not a piece of lake front property that did not have a house on it. It was wild to me, considering my lake has nothing on it, expect a little dock we use to take out a little boat.

But man, upstate NY was great.

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Upstate is beautiful, I live in the Hudson valley which is equally a beautiful. Just don’t really care for my state’s politics, but we don’t discuss those in this thread. IMG_2312.jpegIMG_2874.jpeg
 
Have several Turkeys in the freezer now . Going to get one out and into the fridge to thaw for thanksgiving. I’ll do a farm turkey too not everyone likes wild turkey .
You cook the whole WILD turkey? Now, I keep only the breasts. Legs are tough and inedible.
 
snip... Just don’t really care for my state’s politics, but we don’t discuss those in this thread.
I think that's true for many of us. Our (sub-)urbanized areas with high population (and vote) densities don't believe the same as much of (the majority of?) the people living in the land mass of the country. I was amazed how granular the vote counts were throughout the entire country.
 
I have too much grass and if I don't use it, it turns to weeds. My grandfather was the rancher, I make my money from other things. I was never into being a cowboy and neither was my father. Now my neighbor is a real cowboy and he runs about 30k head on my land in the summer. Him and my grandfather were good friends so I just let him use the grass for free as a thank you for helping my grandfather in his later years.

It goes on for miles and miles...
Hope you appreciate what you have. Parts of upstate NY are still beautiful, but downstate NY farms and open space (not gov owned) have all but disappeared, and the public hiking trails remind you of folks getting online to get on the subway. Trains bring them up from NYC on the weekends.

I'm fortunate to have my 50 acres in the Catskills (I paid only $300/acre in 1985). It was cheap because it is off the grid. You are not allowed to live there year-round. Land in NY is very expensive, and there are no spreads like yours. Unless it is cleared fields, we don't have endless prairie land like you do, it is pretty much all heavily wooded.

Hundred-acre horse farms down here go for millions of dollars, and the taxes are more than most ordinary folks earn in a year. It seems the more folks want to move out of NYC (often with very deep pockets) the more expensive everything gets. I remember driving through the Bronx with my father and he would say "This used to be all farms". Now you can go several counties above NYC and say the same thing. The largest remaining farms have either been purchased by the government or by not-for-profit entities.

Another problem, even though it is illegal, baiting is widespread and diminishes your hunting opportunities. I often see nice deer in Sept on the trial cams, and they all but disappear after bow season opens in Oct.

And don't get me started on all the illegals ... they don't even try to enforce the hunting and fishing regulations on them. It is a sad state of affairs!
 
I got the door hung, and some more of the wall below the breaker box covered. Was digging around for finish screws and found the squar bar and tube I had got for the main door latches. Stopped working on the wall and made the latches. (Well over due project.) Now I don't have to block one door closed to open the other.
In hunting related news, just had a conversation with dad a bit ago. He said there's an decent 8 and really nice 10 point bucks wandering around in the little farm we hunt. Since dad and one of my brothers already got a deer during archery, I can use dad's stand, and it sounds like it will just be me, his friend and possibly his friends son. The other guys are doe hunting (which I find irritating in the first weekend.) Since they both got bucks too already. Should set me up for some prime hunting, best stand location in the woods and they will end up leaving super early and hopefully push any deer over in their side to me.
 
Hope you appreciate what you have. Parts of upstate NY are still beautiful, but downstate NY farms and open space (not gov owned) have all but disappeared, and the public hiking trails remind you of folks getting online to get on the subway. Trains bring them up from NYC on the weekends.

I'm fortunate to have my 50 acres in the Catskills (I paid only $300/acre in 1985). It was cheap because it is off the grid. You are not allowed to live there year-round. Land in NY is very expensive, and there are no spreads like yours. Unless it is cleared fields, we don't have endless prairie land like you do, it is pretty much all heavily wooded.

Hundred-acre horse farms down here go for millions of dollars, and the taxes are more than most ordinary folks earn in a year. It seems the more folks want to move out of NYC (often with very deep pockets) the more expensive everything gets. I remember driving through the Bronx with my father and he would say "This used to be all farms". Now you can go several counties above NYC and say the same thing. The largest remaining farms have either been purchased by the government or by not-for-profit entities.

Another problem, even though it is illegal, baiting is widespread and diminishes your hunting opportunities. I often see nice deer in Sept on the trial cams, and they all but disappear after bow season opens in Oct.

And don't get me started on all the illegals ... they don't even try to enforce the hunting and fishing regulations on them. It is a sad state of affairs!

Oh I know, we do not take it for granted.

The tax thing is a real issue. People would faint about how much taxes and upkeep are. Luckily the wife and I can do it. We worry about our kid being able to afford it. We are taking steps to ensure its survival, but who knows what will happen. The ranch has been in the family even before Wyoming was a state. I'm going to try ensure at least a couple more generations.

The best thing is, it keeps me busy and fit. I have thousands of trees to manage. I have miles of irrigation ditches to make sure are cleaned out. Plus miles of fence to always check. I really only have time after work and weekends to check on things. I have a trusty dog that loves walks and lets me keep an eye on things.


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Hope you appreciate what you have. Parts of upstate NY are still beautiful, but downstate NY farms and open space (not gov owned) have all but disappeared, and the public hiking trails remind you of folks getting online to get on the subway. Trains bring them up from NYC on the weekends.

I'm fortunate to have my 50 acres in the Catskills (I paid only $300/acre in 1985). It was cheap because it is off the grid. You are not allowed to live there year-round. Land in NY is very expensive, and there are no spreads like yours. Unless it is cleared fields, we don't have endless prairie land like you do, it is pretty much all heavily wooded.

Hundred-acre horse farms down here go for millions of dollars, and the taxes are more than most ordinary folks earn in a year. It seems the more folks want to move out of NYC (often with very deep pockets) the more expensive everything gets. I remember driving through the Bronx with my father and he would say "This used to be all farms". Now you can go several counties above NYC and say the same thing. The largest remaining farms have either been purchased by the government or by not-for-profit entities.

Another problem, even though it is illegal, baiting is widespread and diminishes your hunting opportunities. I often see nice deer in Sept on the trial cams, and they all but disappear after bow season opens in Oct.

And don't get me started on all the illegals ... they don't even try to enforce the hunting and fishing regulations on them. It is a sad state of affairs!
Ditto for up here in Ulster County… My local “Sanctuary City” is panicked in the face of Trump’s plan to send the undocumented home… On the other hand it would help with the housing crisis!
 
In 2022 I was invited out to visit a family I know that had moved out near Durango, CO. Once I got west of Lincoln, NE I got off the interstate and stayed off them across Nebraska, Kansas and Colorado and back. My only regret was not taking more time off so I could see and do more, but that gives me a reason to go back out there again. Put just shy of 2600 miles on my 08 Chevy (that already had over 200k miles on it), and it was the first time I went over the Continental Divide.

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