Does your local H-Mart have a food court? They have solid pastries at the one nearest me.SuperJail Warden wrote:
I only shop at H-Mart these days.
They took out the food court at the one I go to. The food court at Mitsuwa is really good and always busy.
Ramen at mitsuwa is too salty
General reminder to warman to pay attention to hunting laws.
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2023/01/19/us/j … index.html
oof
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2023/01/19/us/j … index.html
oof
Lame ass rural people with a stupid hobby. I don't care it is their culture. It is no better than FGM.
I bet over 50% of hunters would hunt homeless people if they were set loose in the wild. Overpopulation!
Newbie wrote:
It is better to get shot in the heart and die painlessly than it is to die homeless on the streets of San Francisco.
I mean there's ways to do it and ways not. Breaking the law obviously inadvisable.
Googling the statistics, 100 die each year as a result of hunting accidents. Maybe statistically underwhelming, given that it's a bunch of people traipsing around the woods with dangerous animals, other hunters, climbing trees and having rifle malfunctions. 27 injuries per 100,000 participants is probably comparable to walking down an old sidewalk with the occasional bump or toe catch.
Googling the statistics, 100 die each year as a result of hunting accidents. Maybe statistically underwhelming, given that it's a bunch of people traipsing around the woods with dangerous animals, other hunters, climbing trees and having rifle malfunctions. 27 injuries per 100,000 participants is probably comparable to walking down an old sidewalk with the occasional bump or toe catch.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2023-01-19 11:38:37)
For myself, I don't particularly want to deal with a tick-infested deer carcass, or put myself in a lottery where the winner gets revenanted by a random bear.
I always thought figured you'd be more of the type to go all Charles Dance on an animal.
I always thought figured you'd be more of the type to go all Charles Dance on an animal.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2023-01-19 11:50:39)
That's actually a real deer. He was actually skinning it.
lol, that's one of those unavoidable mentions like "did you know viggo mortensen broke his toe when he kicked the helmet."
Anyway, warman is probably doing more legit zombie prep by getting into this than he would buying a barbed wire baseball bat.
Anyway, warman is probably doing more legit zombie prep by getting into this than he would buying a barbed wire baseball bat.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2023-01-19 21:09:57)
Yeah, I know.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
General reminder to warman to pay attention to hunting laws.
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2023/01/19/us/j … index.html
oof
Don't come crying to me when there ends up being too many damn deer getting in roads and causing car accidents. Wolves and other predators can only do so much in hunting, hunters help keep the population down.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Lame ass rural people with a stupid hobby. I don't care it is their culture. It is no better than FGM.
The irony of guns, is that they can save lives.
Do I look like I live in a place that has a deer problem?
Last edited by SuperJail Warden (2023-01-21 08:18:45)
On this, do you think the US could contract Boston Dynamics to build robotic wolf packs to fill that niche?RTHKI wrote:
no shit you killed all the wolves
Imagine being on a hike and coming across a bunch of quadrupedal terminators laying into a deer. Yeah I'd head back too.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2023-01-21 08:32:27)
I never killed a wolf, I generally would leave them alone unless they were bothering me or others.RTHKI wrote:
no shit you killed all the wolves
Plenty of wolves around still anyway.
Just saying if you are traveling and come across a bunch a deer on a road or even airport, don't come crying to me.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Do I look like I live in a place that has a deer problem?
Last edited by War Man (2023-01-21 14:20:53)
The irony of guns, is that they can save lives.
Society would need to collapse before deer blocked the entrance to JFK.
Yeah well, rural areas don't have that option, they can overpopulate and cause havoc if not taken control of.SuperJail Warden wrote:
Society would need to collapse before deer blocked the entrance to JFK.
And for the record, not really hunting for pleasure hunting because it provides other meats I generally wouldn't be able to get at a store. I have never seen venison or oryx available at stores, only option is hunting. Of course if the price of turkey gets expensive, I also have an alternative option to save money.
The irony of guns, is that they can save lives.
You shouldn't live in a rural area at all. The Romans were literally the height of civilization and they weren't living in the woods.
There was no deer problem in ancient Rome.
There was no deer problem in ancient Rome.
If you want to live in a city fine. I prefer to live in an area with cleaner air, less expensive, less noise except for the occasional local farmer shooting his gun(which I have no problems with, I find gunfire at a distance to be a calming noise for me), and also a less of a target for terrorists to bomb. go enjoy the city it's not for me.
If there weren't any Romans (referring to all citizens of the Roman Empire/Republic) living in rural areas they would've died by starvation. There were Roman farmers, and there were Romans hunting as well. Hunting is a long tradition that has existed for as long as humanity, even with urbanization civilization still hunted.SuperJail Warden wrote:
You shouldn't live in a rural area at all. The Romans were literally the height of civilization and they weren't living in the woods.
There was no deer problem in ancient Rome.
The irony of guns, is that they can save lives.
Every ancient city including Rome denuded the surrounding country and eventually collapsed due to the distances needed to transport ever increasing quantities of food and fuel.
And the need to support a redundant intelligentsia.
And the need to support a redundant intelligentsia.
Fuck Israel
Just strap it to the hood like all the other rednecks.War Man wrote:
Well if I am hunting, I got to transport the animal in something don't I? I literally said I don't want dead animal smell in the vehicle so truck is the way to go. So of course I would get the truck first before hunting.SuperJail Warden wrote:
You want to get into hunting? So you don't hunt but want to buy a truck first? Huh?War Man wrote:
I want something off road capable and I want to get into hunting and not have dead animal smell in my car. So a vehicle with a pickup bed that I can easily just wash off is appealing.
Plus with asshole drivers, I am better protected in a truck than I am in a car if I do get in an accident.
Its weird that Americans don't like trailers, but prefer to drive a behemoth truck 364 days a year for the one day a year they might need to transport something.
A tiny fraction of the cost of buying and owning a truck - a small 4x4 and a trailer.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2023-01-21 20:14:28)
Fuck Israel
Yes of course
"But what if my truck breaks down and I need to transport it, to the garage?
Clearly I must buy a massiver truck and trailer and use if for my daily commute
Really I should take a spare truck with me everywhere, for safety"
"But what if my truck breaks down and I need to transport it, to the garage?
Clearly I must buy a massiver truck and trailer and use if for my daily commute
Really I should take a spare truck with me everywhere, for safety"
Fuck Israel
Not that we don't have a big car problem, but I'm pretty sure sales of smaller pickups dwarf the supermassive behemoth stereotype. If you've ever sat in one of those next to Compensatorâ„¢-brand personal transports (which are usually unbaptised by being put to actual work), it feels more like you're in a car. Sitting in an F150 and one of those pulls up on you, instant aftermarket headlights through your back window. Really fun stuff at 10 pm. I've also seen cars larger than some pickups.
Not to forget that while Dilbert's on this path of high and mighty mockery, he's living out in the car-heavy, air-conditioned 'burbs in the middle of a coal nation. Flying to conventions in South-Southeast Asia. He's got his own suburbia workshop full of power tools and everything. Surprised he doesn't already own a pickup truck for the five times a year he hauls a new piece of electricity-eating power equipment back home.
Not to forget that while Dilbert's on this path of high and mighty mockery, he's living out in the car-heavy, air-conditioned 'burbs in the middle of a coal nation. Flying to conventions in South-Southeast Asia. He's got his own suburbia workshop full of power tools and everything. Surprised he doesn't already own a pickup truck for the five times a year he hauls a new piece of electricity-eating power equipment back home.
Warman, if/when you do go hunting, steer clear of graboid territory. Lots of novices get hurt.