|
Antelope Up Close: How to use the lay of the land to get within range of skittish pronghorns.(Hunter's Bonus)
Outdoor Life
|
August 1, 2004|
|
COPYRIGHT 2004 Bonnier Corporation. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.
(Hide copyright information)
Copyright
|
Byline: John Haviland
How to approach the band of pronghorn antelope in the mile-wide basin in the distance was the big question. I was using a muzzleloader, so I would have to crawl especially close to get a decent shot. But the only possible cover for a stalk was a low ridge that ran along the northern edge of the basin. Even then, a miracle of maneuvering would be required to narrow the gap on the nice buck that I had spotted in the middle of the herd.
Just when I was ready to admit defeat even before trying, I recalled some of the things a Wyoming ...
|
The mentor's inspiration
Newspaper article from: Jerusalem Post
; ...overlooked French aristocrat Joseph Arthur, comte de Gobineau, had he not sought Wagner out...WAGNER'S PATRONAGE made Gobineau the guru of Aryan- superiority adherents, while Gobineau's concept of Teutonic supremacy...
|
|
Anniversaries
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London
; ...and critic, 1794; John Frederick Lewis, painter, 1805; John Henry Anderson, stage magician, 1814; Joseph Arthur, Comte de Gobineau, diplomat and writer, 1816; Jervis McEntee, landscape painter, 1828; James Abbott McNeill Whistler...
|
|
Africa: This is how far we have come
Magazine article from: New African
; ...others, contents himself with drinking, singing, and dancing like a baboon, to drive dull care away." * Comte Joseph-Arthur Gobineau (1816-1882): "Africans are people who lack the sophisticated linguistic skills, the scientific and...
|
Find more facts and information related to the
article "Antelope Up Close: How to use the lay of the land ..."