- Apr 13, 2018
- 7,162
- 29,667
- 977
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Do you chisel them out of the ice first before you gig them? Or do you just raise them free-range in your backyard and go hunt them with your .22 when you get hungry?I love frog legs, without okra on the side
Do you chisel them out of the ice first before you gig them? Or do you just raise them free-range in your backyard and go hunt them with your .22 when you get hungry?
Do they reply back to the call with nonsense in list form? Or is it just unordered gibberish?I use a frog call during the summer, and ambush them with a 12 ga. Northern frogs are huge.
They think it’s a ripe female so they sneak up to take a peek and we either take their legs or shoot them.Do they reply back to the call with nonsense in list form? Or is it just unordered gibberish?
They think it’s a ripe female so they sneak up to take a peek and we either take their legs or shot them.
I normally take their legs and kick them back in the swamp. That way they will have new legs next year. A renewable food source.
Did she grab the gizzard! They grow back too.my great great granny had Cracker Jack chickens and she’d do the same... just walk out take off one drumstick and those amazing birds would hop around and grow back new ones while they avoided predators...
sometimes she’d reach down their throat and feel around for a prize...
usually just a toy whistle or a sticker... but that’s how they got their name
Do the prizes grow back?my great great granny had Cracker Jack chickens and she’d do the same... just walk out take off one drumstick and those amazing birds would hop around and grow back new ones while they avoided predators...
sometimes she’d reach down their throat and feel around for a prize...
usually just a toy whistle or a sticker... but that’s how they got their name