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Blog Entries from the WeHuntSC.com blogging crew


The Jake Intimidator
    WeHuntSC.com - The Jake Intimidator by Countrymen Innovations
  The Jake Intimidator by Countrymen Innovations

I?m relatively young in my turkey hunting career, but I?ve got enough experience to know that turkey hunting is fun and exciting!  I?ve been looking forward to this coming turkey season for some time now and I?m ready to get out and take a shot at calling one in, getting the hunt on video, and getting one on the ground!  This year I?m also excited to try out a really neat new decoy called the Jake Intimidator by Countrymen Innovations.

The Jake Intimidator is a unique decoy that uses motion to simulate a Tom puffing up and strutting.  The action and motion it creates is pretty cool looking.  When I opened up the box and took the Jake Intimidator out I immediately started trying to figure it out and began putting it together.  It?s really easy to assemble and is pretty fun to play with.  The turkey body on this decoy is really life like and has Velcro on the back to which you attach the fan-tail.  The material of the fan-tail is really thick feeling and durable, but yet flexible.  As you would imagine, the fan-tail came wrapped up in the box too?so I had to spread it out and give it time to flatten out to give an accurate representation of a turkey?s tail.

The Jake Intimidator has kind of a spring-loaded base that you drive into the ground with stakes that are attached to the base.  The tail connection piece of the decoy attaches to the two rods on the base and you clip the string to the connection on the base and pulling it makes the decoy stand up and lay down.  It?s kind of difficult to describe in words, but you?ll understand it better from the videos below. 

The Setup

Imagine that you?re turkey hunting and you?ve got 2 ? 3 hen decoys out and you?ve got the Jake Intimidator lying flat on the ground just out front of the hens.  You?ve got a big gobbler talking back and forth to you in the distance and he?s on his way in. You give him just enough sweet talk to coax him closer and the decoys have him strutting his stuff out there showing off.  You let him get a little bit closer.  Just when he thinks he?s got all these ladies to himself you pull the string on him and just like that he thinks there?s another male already there talking to his ladies!  Who knows what will happen at this point, but whatever comes next is bound to be fun.

I shot a quick video working with the Jake Intimidator and I went about attaching mine differently, but either way will work I guess :-)

WeHuntSC.com - 10% Discount on the Jake IntimidatorWhat?s even better is that the guys at Countrymen Innovations have offered a discount price for anyone from our site audience who wants to purchase a Jake Intimidator.  If you use the code: WEHUNT11 you?ll get a 10% discount when you order your Jake Intimidator?and if you do, be sure to video your hunts and post them to the site!

Counting down until turkey season!

Regards,

Clint
 


Ups And Downs To Filming Hunts
Filming my hunts has been the single most enjoyable thing this past season.  If you have never filmed your hunts and plan to try it at some point in the future then you may be in for a rude awakening. It is not as easy as it looks!  Everything most happen just right for the video to come out like you plan.My filming days first started about two years ago. I had just finished a fantastic evening hunt and when I got back to the clubhouse I, like everyone does, began to tell my story about the great hunt I just experienced. Well, after telling the people at the clubhouse that I had just seen eleven deer in my hunt I quickly realized that they didn?t believe a word I said! So, I went out and purchased a cheap DV tape camera to start filming my hunts so I could have some proof in my pudding the next time they asked about my hunt.  In time I was able to verify my statements by providing footage that couldn?t be denied!
 
That was how I initially got started filming hunts, but after filming my hunts for some time now, my motives for filming are different.  I love to look back on my hunts and re-live the moments that I sit so long in the stand to witness.  Soon after the film of my first hunt I learned how difficult it was going to be to video my hunts.There are many different things that must happen to get the perfect hunt on film. I used to free-hand my videos. This consisted of filming the deer or turkey then putting the camera down to pick up my gun to make a shot all in a period of time where the animal can run off.  As you can imagine this process doesn?t always work because the animals are constantly moving around so this makes it difficult to film them and then shoot them
 
  Camera Tripod
lol!  After many frustrating hunts like this I purchased a camera mount to attach to my stands. This new technique proved to have its own share of problems as well. The camera mount clamps down to the side of a tree stand, but if a deer happens to walk by on the other side of the stand you have to unclamp to mount and flip it to the other side.  Imagine trying to do this while the deer is watching you or listening for any sounds of danger.  One wrong move and your hunt could be over.  I figured the best way to film my hunts is to ask a buddy to tag along and take turns filming each other?s hunts.  That way one guy focuses on the hunt and one guy on filming it. Another pain in the butt is editing the video after you capture it in the woods.  Ultimately, I spend more time editing my clips then trying to capture them during the hunt.  It may not look like I spend a lot of time editing my videos but there?s a lot in the process.  I upload the video, watch all the clips, and cut out the parts I don?t want to use. Then I put the clips together adding transitions, music, and text along the way. Once the video is finalized I then upload it to YouTube.
 
All in all its worth all the time and trouble I put in the videos. We get the satisfaction of looking back on our hunts, and entertaining the people who choose to watch the videos.  If you?ve got some neat hunting spots and are thinking about videoing a hunt, I encourage you to give it a shot?you just never know what you might get on film out in the wild!
 
 
Derek 

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