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latinheat

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Posts posted by latinheat


  1. While obedience training, a simple loud hand clap with a positive stimulus follow-up. Getting the pup used to the hunt game, however you prefer to do that. Then mix in hand claps, followed by distant low gunfire with a partner helping you. Always follow-up the noise with a positive stimulus.  


  2. I have an idea towards a solution. What about a mental health background check? This would require mandatory reporting by MH doctors, which I know they would not like. However, if a convicted felon has his records available to the government for a criminal history check to keep them from buying any firearm, I'm not sure why anyone would not want an MH patient to not get flagged.

    Even if they don't have a felony in their background, the psychological instability should be obvious, and the records available, to keep them from purchasing firearms, or ammunition.

    Not sure why this type of idea has not been pushed by anyone.


  3. Hello,

    My son was/is left eye dominant. He is absolutely right handed. I changed his starter bow to left handed when he was about 9 years old. It did not help and he got discouraged as well.

    I switched him back to a dedicated right handed bow. He is now 13 and He shoots it just fine and is no longer discouraged. My experience showed that if he was right handed, he would train himself out of his eye dominance. It worked. I'm not an expert and your situation sounds different so my reply is simply for consideration of interest.


  4. My experience with my son has been this:

    If you blade your body to shoot a rifle or a bow, the eye from that side automatically dominates over the other. The only way it becomes an issue is if you are pistol shooting with your sighting system directly in front of your body, or, centered. Try it. My son is left-eye dominant and shoots a right-handed bow just fine. Same with his rifle shooting.


  5. Also, every inch of floor to baseboard contact needs to be cleared, cleaned (vacuumed) and sprayed. Treat the house as if it is moving day, and clean every inch of it. Furniture will need to be treated as well.

    Include dog beds and anything they like to lay on top of. Beds and sofa's are notorious for infestation centers. All it takes is one tick to blow-up with eggs and you have thousands of babies waiting to crawl on something and feed. The trick is to get ahead of the cycle. Good Luck.

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