A few vinegared veggies thrown in on the side.

Yak meat is hot damn.

  • bitofarambler@crazypeople.onlineOPM
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    26 days ago

    Ha, yea, I prefer fundamentals and deep ends. I remember the first day I got it. It felt good, balanced, light but sturdy, and I thought “I’ll give it 20 minutes for my first practice” and maybe five minutes later I was like okayyy ow, this is going to take some strength training and mental adjustment.

    They included a wrist/arm guard with the set, but again deep ends, so I refused to use it so that I learned to rotate my elbow. Took a few sessions, but I got the hang of not shaving the skin off my forearm fairly quick.

    I figured I’d learn on a recurve and then switch to compound if I went hunting or it became a serious hobby, but it was it was just a fun after-hours thing and I move around a lot so I didn’t want to carry a bow with me or buy a new one in each city. Although I’ve been in Mongolia this month, so maybe I should have. I even went into an archery store the other day, but I was so focused on hammock hunting I didn’t think about the bows!

    Makes sense about firearms, a tool that powerful is weird. to be in the world. firearms are weird, impersonal items. I’ve never shot one! There’s a police shooting range in Bangkok where you can pay 20 bucks to fire a pistol, a rifle and throw a grenade. I have no interest in the grenade, but next time I’m Thai-bound I’ll probably try the pistol and rifle.

    • wyldrstallyns@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      26 days ago

      Love it! That’s awesome! Man, it brightens my day, just reading about your first foray into archery! 🤩🤘🏼

      So, uh. How much to ship a Mongolian shortbow to the PacNW?

      • bitofarambler@crazypeople.onlineOPM
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        25 days ago

        Thanks, it was a lot of fun and the meditative aspect makes a lot of sense! I kept all the gear behind the desk in the classroom i taught in, and one day all the kids raced in and i hadn’t put the gear away as securely as usual so instantly a half dozen 4-5 year olds ran to the corner and grabbed at the arrows.

        I got all the arrows back very quickly, I don’t even think any of the parents noticed, but it was briefly heart stopping(and funny).

        ha, from China close to $100 just for shipping right now, so somewhere in that range. i was in an archery store the other day, but I was focused on hammock hunting and didn’t notice the prices of the bows.

        they did have handmade bows

        • wyldrstallyns@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          25 days ago

          Oh, wow! Those are beautiful. And, that leatherwork is fascinating. I can almost catch the scent of hide and wood in the pic. 🤩 I’m curious about the different bow shapes and their uses, as well as the stylistic accents in the leather pieces. Lovely though, even without said answers.

          Also, what kiddo could ever resist the mystique of a bow & arrow set? You’ve certainly got a few of the lesser recognized instincts for teaching: vigilance, rapid response, deflection, etc. 🤣

          (But seriously, though. Good work keeping them safe!)

          • bitofarambler@crazypeople.onlineOPM
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            25 days ago

            Haha, for sure, constant vigilance is key while teaching. Children are great at finding danger. Climbing my glasstop standing desk, rocking their desks back and forward until they fall, sharpening a pencil until it’s sharper than a dagger.

            Before I realized what was happening, I could see their eyes all instantly lock on the corner of the room on entering and saw that a corner of the target stand was sticking out from under the desk and then they all just sprinted for the prize. very exciting, and then they’re all gone after 45 minutes, which was plenty of time with them for me.

            I really liked those leather quivers too; the store has a bunch of great pictures.

              • bitofarambler@crazypeople.onlineOPM
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                25 days ago

                Haha, lots of practice traveling light, although I definitely understand the urge. Everything at that shop looks so cool, and Mongolia is bow country.

                But I’m working on getting back into hammock camping after a long break, so I was laser focused on gathering and then prepping DIYing and testing new gear before I leave in a couple days.

                  • bitofarambler@crazypeople.onlineOPM
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                    25 days ago

                    I love hammock camping, fastest setup and breakdown, cleanup all you have to do is flip over the hammock and shake it, packs down small, very lightweight, and for me it’s the most comfortable way to sleep, more comfortable than a bed.

                    So now I have a very sturdy new brand of hammock I haven’t tried before called nature hike and a bespoke mosquito net for just about 20 USD, so after the first day of camping I’ll be saving money on rent every night I camp outside. japan is the perfect country for hammock camping because they also have public baths so I can stay clean every day even if I hike all day, so yup, definitely looking forward to it.

                    Do you have any particular destinations in mind that you’d like to get to?

                    Oh and yea that yak plate was a winnerrrrr.