Krustyklimber
New member
Clint,
I didn't mean to put you on the spot, it's just that I checked your profile, and other than this thread, you had only one post here.
I didn't recognize you, as you do me?
"what am I hoping to get out of a nice small howler and an open reed distress call?"
I am not looking to get anything, just the promise that you'll either use the call, and take good care of it, or give it to someone who will.
I only make a couple dozen calls a year, so you won't get one tomorrow, but you're on "the list"... you'll have one by the time the young of the year are ready.
Looks like you live somewhere with a lot more coyotes than we got.
CoyoteBlaster,
I don't like Dodges, doesn't make steel a bad material.
I don't like the Dan Thompson RDH either, the body is too thick (deadening the sound), and the toneboard takes too much air to drive.
I like some plastic howlers, I just don't dig 'em. Being plastic isn't what makes them work well.
Krusty
I didn't mean to put you on the spot, it's just that I checked your profile, and other than this thread, you had only one post here.
I didn't recognize you, as you do me?
"what am I hoping to get out of a nice small howler and an open reed distress call?"
I am not looking to get anything, just the promise that you'll either use the call, and take good care of it, or give it to someone who will.
I only make a couple dozen calls a year, so you won't get one tomorrow, but you're on "the list"... you'll have one by the time the young of the year are ready.
Looks like you live somewhere with a lot more coyotes than we got.
CoyoteBlaster,
I don't like Dodges, doesn't make steel a bad material.
I don't like the Dan Thompson RDH either, the body is too thick (deadening the sound), and the toneboard takes too much air to drive.
I like some plastic howlers, I just don't dig 'em. Being plastic isn't what makes them work well.
Krusty
