Rocky Rodgers

  1. Waiting on Reloading

    Waiting on Reloading

    It has been pretty bleak on the reloading aisle for the last several years. The necessary bits and pieces for building ammunition have been missing. There’s been rumors about how somewhere else in the country they have shelves full and no limits on how much you can buy. The interesting thing about the rumors I have heard is that in fairly short order I’ll talk to someone else from the same area and they say they can’t find anything either. 

     

    But recently, as the factory loaded ammunition has gotten easier to find and calibers that hadn’t been on the shelf have started to show up and stay for more than a minute or two, the reloading aisle is getting back to having actual reloading components on the shelves. 

     

    We are not out of the woods yet. Not by a long shot, but as I write this we have some pistol primers and some small rifle primers on the shelf. There were, for a short time, large rifle primers. And they will show up again. Brass is still tough. I expect it to get better as the

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  2. Pellet Guide

    Pellet Guide
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  3. Santa & His Reindeer

    Santa & His Reindeer

    Time to get into the Christmas spirit! A great way to do that is visiting with Santa, getting a picture with him in his sleigh and petting a live reindeer!   Also nibble on a cookie from the Kooke Co and sip on some hot chocolate to help stay warm on a wintery Utah day.  Mark you calendars and bring all your littles to this event it is sure to be a jolly good time!

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  4. Smoked Turkey?

    Smoked Turkey?

    Prep work for a tasty turkey on Thanksgiving

    There are many different kinds of grill and smokers on the market these days and two of my favorites are Camp Chef with the Woodwind, Apex and SG models, and the Traeger of course with the Timberline, Ironwood and Pro series.  With Thanksgiving coming up right around the corner it is time to start planning!   I have not smoked many Turkeys but I did one last season and it was a hit so I am anxious to try again and perfect it.   I will be using a Traeger grill and trying out the turkey pellets in their line.   So many questions come to mind… How long do you smoke a turkey for?  How big a turkey is needed?  How to make a moist turkey?  Wet brine or Dry brine?  The list is endless.

    First, I use this chart for figuring out how big a turkey I will need.

    5-8 people = 8-12 lbs. turkey

    8-11 people = 12-16 lbs. turkey

    11-13 people = 16-20 lbs. turkey

    13-16 people = 20-24 lbs. turkey

    16-19 people = 24-28 lbs. turkey

    Brining is a fancy word

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  5. Seasons of Utah

    Seasons of Utah

    Seasons of Utah

    Winter lasts from December through February with long periods of snowfall, freezing temperatures and short daylight hours. December and January are the coldest months of the year. The shortest day is December 21, (winter solstice) with just nine hours of daylight. It is fairly common to have a white Christmas in Utah.  February sometimes brings a mix of winter and spring weather with sneak peeks of warmer temperatures and more sunshine.  Winter time activities in Utah include Skiing, Snowboarding, Hunting, Snow Shoeing, Sledding, Ice Skating Etc.…

    March begins with cold weather at the start of the spring season in Utah. Early spring is prone to cold fronts, and the arid land has sizable daily temperature differences. A moderate amount of rain falls in March, and the rest takes the form of snow. In April, temperatures rise with the advance of the spring season in Utah. Measurable snowfall recedes and most ski resorts end operations mid-April. Spring blooms, rain showers

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  6. Vortex Days

    Vortex Days

    For a couple years now Basin Sports has been doing a month-long promotional deal with Vortex Optics. Vortex Days reminds me of the first time I heard of them. It was about thirteen or fourteen years ago. At that time, as I recall, there were only a few different pairs of binoculars, two lines of rifle scopes and a couple spotting scopes. 

     

    We didn’t bring in too much starting out. There were a lot of other companies with larger catalogs of optics vying for shelf space. But Vortex brought something else with them. They had a warranty that didn’t require registering with them and covered things that had nothing to do with “parts and workmanship.” If you dropped your binos, they took care of you. A lot of folks see a company launch with that kind of service and expect it to change when they get their piece of the market carved out. Not Vortex. As they have grown from a few scopes and a few binos into one of the biggest names in sport optics, they have never backed away from their desire

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  7. Taking A Look

    Taking A Look

    So it finally happened to me. I’ve heard the stories for a while about getting into the range bag or dragging out the hiking gear in the springtime and finding your binoculars not exactly as you remember putting them away. The problems range from not quite being as clear as you remember, to having double vision, all the way to now having a pair of monoculars, one for each eye. 

     

    My binoculars weren’t broken in half. It wasn’t that bad. But the left side didn’t look in the same direction as the right side anymore. Somehow, at some point they had hit something hard and were out of alignment. It would have been as simple as sending them to the manufacturer for warranty service work, if that company had given a warranty worth the paper it was written on. That is a whole different conversation on warranties though, but it was okay. The binos had been a gift and it wasn’t a dire emergency, just inconvenient. I didn’t have a hunt coming up or a camping trip next week that I’d need binos for.

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