This is Owen Lee. He was one of my Motorcycle safety class students a few years back... and he also plays bass for the Cincinnati Orchestra.
Much to my surprise... he is a metal head. While he was riding during class I noticed he had a Saxxon button on his jacket. We got along pretty well after that. I have tried to get him to come down to the WVBR for a few years but no luck as of yet.
at about the 2:48 mark he plays a cool little riff... but I suggest you watch the whole thing.
He also plays keyboards in a band called Electric Citizen ever now and then
Posted on Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - 12:02 pm:
The biggest advantage I have seen from piano lessons as a youngster is that I can do different things with each hand at the same time. For example, I can turn one dial on my flowbench clockwise and the other counter clockwise.
Posted on Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - 01:53 pm:
Sort of like John Lord in Deep Purple. Before he died he wrote an orchestral piece that's really good. I got the DVD, he was a great talent.
Zach, I never thought about my hands being able to do different things was related to my piano lessons but maybe you have a point. I've always been able to pat my head while rubbing my stomach! Taking nuts or bolts out or in with both hands but not in tandem.
Scanned through the Helibacon site- dang but that looks like hella-fun for folks with combustible $$$. The name's misleading- I'd expect/hope that a few choice hogs could be recovered/field dressed, prepped and shipped for an epic BBQ at a later date. For a certain co$$$t, I'm sure.
.223 is fine for coyotes. .357 out of a carbine should be fine for hog, but ammo choice is important. Hard cast large meplat bullets that punch through the scar tissue boars form on their chests from fighting. Or whatever the guide recommends.
My brother is planning on using his .30-06, at around 75 yards.
He doesn't have a .357 or .44, and he has no intention of getting gored. He is going to be on private property where they are having issues with the wild hogs tearing things up.
Arkansas has open season all year long. No permit or license required.
I was wrong. I looked it up. Turns out my brother will need a $25 license. Out of staters $55 for one day.
State: ArkansasWebsite: http://www.agfc.com/Feral Hunting: Yes – Arkansas allows feral hog hunting on both private and public land.Hunting Licenses:Resident: $25 for a one-year resident sportsman’s license.Non Resident: $55 for a 1-day non-resident all day game hunting license, $125 for a 3-day license, $180 for a 5-day license and $350 for a one-year license.Hog Hunting Season: Year-round on private land; on public land feral hogs may be killed in specific locations during the dates in October, November and December which coincide with open firearms deer, bear and elk seasons.Night Hunting: On private land only. On public land hogs must be hunted during from 30 minutes before sunrise until 30 minutes after sunset.Baiting: On private land onlyLimit: No bag limit