Louis Richards
LSB Member
I think shooting them year-round is legal on your own property if they're destroying your property or crops
LOL... As soon as I was done hosing out the wagon and washed up, I was GTG.
I once ate my lunch in the hospital morgue while securing a frozen DB. We needed to get her thawed enough to straighten, so we could secure/seal the slab's door. Ya never know what the day will bring.
LOL... yeah, they don't tell you (in the "come work for us" brochures) that 85% of your efforts are to be a human garbage man, dealing with the same 5% of the populous (day in/day out).Ah the life of a public servant huh Ratdog? Those runs both sound familiar, I can smell them now.....
LOL... yeah, they don't tell you (in the "come work for us" brochures) that 85% of your efforts are to be a human garbage man, dealing with the same 5% of the populous (day in/day out).
I had one frequent flier I'd jailed so many times, I had his information memorized (DOB, SS#, State ID number, address, phone number...). Wasn't a bad guy, just instant "stupid" when booze added, and, liked his booze.
The comical part of the honey-bucket wrestler... he was an ex-cop for the Dept. I was working for. Never had another dealing with him after that bad day he had. But, to this day, I remember his name and that day's encounter with him. LOL
LOL... indeed. For example... we had one "couple" (older) who would get tanked up and get to squabbling, and... she'd call 911. The routine was ALWAYS the same, nearly word for word. I got to where I could mimic their voices, and quote (nearly) verbatim what would be said. When I had a new person I was training, and we'd get a call to that address, I'd tell the new person, here's what's going to happen (and would mimic their voices as I'd site the dialog). We'd get to the house, knock on the door, and watching the new person keep a straight face was comical... the tones of voices and script was nearly verbatim.Never really thought about it Ratdog, till you said dealing with the same 5% day in and day out. I guess that's really true isn't it?
But it makes total sense. People are either inherently good or they are not. The good you never meet and the not good you constantly meet.
Kind of the beauty of the device I guess. Just because there are so many options to choose from, it doesn't have to be endlessly complicated to use. Just sort through it to find what appeals to you and make your selections for it to default too? Then, on/use/off? Nice when the variety for different folks' needs is built in, with an ability to lock in favorite features.I never thought about how complicated my Zeus was until now. Power on, shoot hogs, power off. Hmm. 99% of the time it stays white hot with the same reticle, with no additional magnification.
I never thought about how complicated my Zeus was until now. Power on, shoot hogs, power off. Hmm. 99% of the time it stays white hot with the same reticle, with no additional magnification.
If simple is what you seek, the IR Defense MK II and III are actually a little simpler than the Patrol from a set up and menu selection perspective, because of the three turret controls. But once you make the menu selections you want, the Patrol's quick menu is hard to beat.
Louis, you will get better performance from the Patrol if you NUC it four or five times in the first few minutes after start up and another several time as it warms up, until its been on maybe 10mins, and then an occasional NUC after that. With a Butler Creek cap, NUC'ing is an easy one handed affair.
JPK
For something like $12, get the BC cap, you will get a better NUC because the cap is uniform and held closed allows no gaps.
Also, do you know that the quick menu is configurable? I haven't bothered yet but would like to put brightness on the quick menu in lieu of the image capture.
JPK
Comprehension is truly the most vital part of reading Taco.
I already said 99% of everybody keeps it in black-and-white,
thus, not complicated...
What I did say was the options made it MORE confusing compared to a PATROL. And that was ONE very small part of many other larger things.
And considering the mass popularity of it, I'm not the only one that thinks that. As I have read over and over and over about how simple it is to use.