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Exploring Hunting In The Wood
People often used guns and bow and arrow for hunting. In this article you will explore how to hunt by using your head and eyes.

Once you have formed the top, you can gradually go into the standing hoop. A clever artist with the lasso can turn this into a rolling ring by letting the loop graze the ground and roll along. You have to walk along beside the ring to keep it in motion.

Throwing the Lasso
When you have become proficient with your lasso, you can begin to throw it. For this purpose you need a long rope. Hold the loop in your hand, leaving the long end of the rope neatly coiled at your feet so that it can uncoil without difficulty when you throw it. Put one foot on the loose end. Then throw the loop at the target the way you would throw a life preserver. (A good practice target is a heavy tree limb, about 9 to 12 feet high and without any branches.) After the throw, let the rope run lightly through your hand so that as soon as the loop is around the target you can pull it tight.

Exploring
Hunting in the woods is not confined to shooting game with a rifle or bow and arrow. You can spend your time in the out-of-doors far more enjoyably and constructively if you hunt with your head and eyes. All searching, tracking, and interpreting is really hunting, and the most patient and shrewdest hunters today are not those who hang their hunting trophies on the wall in the form of antlers, but rather those who preserve their booty from the hunt in photo albums hunters with the camera.

Yet even without a camera there are innumerable things to hunt for in the woods and fields, things most people pass by without seeing. As you train your eyes and sharpen your powers of observation, you will begin to notice many fascinating things that you weren't aware of before.

Looking at the Tree Trunks
The marks on tree trunks have a story to tell. You might find traces of a mouse feeding air holes made by a beetle or other insect vertical, scarred tears or frost rips caused as a result of strains in the trunk because of differences in temperature traces of a squirrel feeding traces of a rabbit feeding

Branches and Leaves
You frequently find galls, swellings of the tissues, on pine or oak branches and leaves. Galls result from the attacks of certain insects gallflies, gall midges, and some aphids that puncture the plant at a certain point and lay their eggs in the wound. The wound then grows into various shapes and the larvae grow up inside, feeding on the rapidly growing plant fibers.

Camping is a fun as well as it brings you closer to nature and help you to explore more about your surrounding. Mitch Johnson is a regular writer for www.1-scuba-diving-gear.com/ , www.campfunmadeez.info/ , www.goodbudgetholiday.info/
Copyright 2006. Free Articles.














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