Showing posts with label my book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label my book. Show all posts

Monday, February 3, 2014

My Book

Shoot Deer, my book, as a beginner's guide to hunting whitetails is available for Kindle.  Free Northerner posted a review on his blog.

I'd like to point out that I was unhappy with the editing of it and I've had it edited by someone other than me.  I am in the midst of making some changes, and adding pictures.  I am particularly reworking the chapters on public land, rifles, muzzleloaders, and how to shoot a bow.

I would recommend waiting to buy my book until I re-release it.

In the meantime I suggest that anyone interested in hunting whitetails read two other books on the subject:

Outwitting the Whitetail by Perry G. Reilly

More of a pamphlet than a "book", but it is just about everything that you need to know about hunting whitetail deer.

One Man's Whitetail by Gene Wensel

A better hunter than me is Mr. Wensel.  He hunts exclusively with traditional bows, which makes everything much more difficult.  After being nearly done with writing my book, I re-read this one and discovered three anecdotes that I had attributed to long-lost magazine articles were actually from this book.

He wrote my book two years after I was born!

Visit my deer hunting blog if you have any questions or want more information.

shootdeer.wordpress.com

Happy hunting.

Random picture from my collection

Friday, December 6, 2013

Shoot Deer

My new book is out, and after a day, I've sold 0.  I don't expect to sell a pile of them, but I even more appreciate why people feel the need to lie and exaggerate in order to promote their stuff.

Now that deer season is mostly over here in Wisconsin, I'll be able to return to somewhat regular blogging.  Ironically, if I had wanted to maximize my sales of a book about hunting, I would have missed many days of hunting in order to write about it, and promote it. (Matt has a book on how to do this.  I read the book a while ago, but have been so busy, I have not reviewed it here.)

I doubt that getting your hobbies and work combined is a good idea; every guy I know who wanted to get a job in fishing needed to specifically give up fishing time in order to work, and yet was expected to still catch more and bigger fish.

The Kindle Version is Done: Shoot Deer

My new book "Shoot Deer: A Beginner's Guide to Hunting Whitetails" is now available for ebooks from amazon.com, for $7.99.

203 pages of information covering all whitetail deer hunting topics from: which guns to buy, bows to buy, how to shoot them, where to hunt, how to improve your property, how to hang treestands, how to score deer, many mistakes to avoid, and more.

Any Amazon reviews are much appreciated.

 If you're a blogger and want to get a free version, let me know at eltim164 at gmail.com; I'll take all the promotion that I can get.  (Matt and Free Northerner can expect whatever they call the promo ones this evening after I'm done with work.)

http://www.amazon.com/Shoot-Deer-Beginners-Hunting-Whitetails-ebook/dp/B00H4JHX5K/ref=sr_1_3?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1386335883&sr=1-3&keywords=hunting+whitetails

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

I'm Back!

I was busy shooting a big buck, doing more hunting, working, sleeping, and driving between them to post.

Also my book is done, and soon to be on Kindle.  I hope.  My next free hour (seriously) is december 4. So I hope that I get all of Amazon's stuff figured out tommorow.

Matt, Free Northerner, and my new friend Andrew will get free copies of my breakthroguh, groudbreakeing, and so on book " Shoot Deer: Better late than never: subtitle to be inserted here"!!!!

No I don't have a picture of my buck (19" 10 point) but I totally shot him.  Hooray!!!!

Also: what's with this Obummercare sheist?  Didn't anyone predict that it'd be terrible?

Monday, June 24, 2013

Another Book Update

I've not been writing as much as I should.  I am around 40,000 words.  I'll likely end up at around 60-70,000.

I keep reconsidering the order of the chapters, and that's affecting how I write them.

As ever, let me know if you think that I've missed anything, and I'll be sure to add it.

New chapter arrangement:

Introduction
1. Who, What, When, Where, Why, How?
2. Whitetail Deer
3. Whitetail Deer Antlers
4. 3 Steps to Shooting Big Bucks
5. Where Deer Live, Generally
6. Where Deer Live Specifically
7. Alternatives to Owning Hunting Land
8. Hunting Without Land or Money
9. Buying A Hunting Property
10. Neighbor Relations
11. Improving Your Property
12. Food Plots
13. Where to Put a Food Plot
14. Food Plot Equipment
15. Creating Food Plots
16. Trail Cameras
17. Hunting Methods
18. Stand Hunting
19. Stand Styles
20. Hang On Stands
21. Stand Recommendations
22. Setting Your Stand Up
23. Stand Positioning
24. Hunting Clothing
25. Hunting Clothing Recommendations
26. Guns
27. Rifles
28. Shooting a Long Gun
29. Rifle Recommendations
30. Cartridges
31. Shotguns
32. Muzzleloaders
33. Telescopic Sights 
34. Bows
35. Shooting a Bow
36. Bow Recommendations
37. Bow Accesories
38. Hunting Accessories
39. Where to Spend and Where to Save on Equipment
40. Stealth
41. The Entrance
42. The Hunt
43. The Exit
44. Deer Activity
45. Deer Aging
46. Which deer should you shoot?
47. When should you make your move?
48. Where should you shoot?
49. Blood Trailing
50. Field Dressing
51. Skinning & Butchering
52. Antler Removal
53. Antler Scoring
54. The Tricks to Becoming a Successful Deer Hunter
55. My Hunting Successes (and Failures)
56. Stories
57. Interesting Ideas
Conclusion

Monday, March 4, 2013

Friday, February 22, 2013

My Book: A Chapter



I picked a chapter at random from my forthcoming deer hunting book to give you a feel for it.  I'll post other chapters in the future, but here is a chapter on hunting property neighbor relations.

I should have probably waited until I proofread this again, but I want to get the whole rough draft written before I start on the proofreading and finding a proofreader.

 Hunting Property Neighbor Relations

The very first thing you will want to do with your new property is to put “no trespassing” signs up, and maybe a gate, or fence, along a side, or two.

Buy shiny new, durable, “no trespassing” signs and surround your property with them.  Know that the only thing worse than not having the signs is having worn out signs.  Surrounding your property with new signs shows that you are at your property often and that you would notice trespassers.

Sometimes properties have old roads, or trails leaning into them.  Block off roads that you don’t want to use with logs or fences.  Some deer may travel down those roads, but you should block the road at your property line so that it is not too easy for someone to trespass.
You do not want to travel all over your property or have roads all over.  But you will need, at least, one entrance road.  That road should have a gate that looks solid and maintained.  

Like new signs, a solid gate shows that you are serious about not wanting trespassers to enter your property.  And no gate, or an old worn out one, shows that you probably don’t visit often, and probably wouldn’t notice trespassers.

If you add a gate over the main entrance, make it a really big one so that you can get big tractors in someday.  You may hire loggers or someone to spread lime on your food plots and you won’t want to tear down your gate so that they can get in.  I have two 12 foot gates, making a 24 foot opening, so that loggers, tractors and anything else that I may want has no trouble entering.

You will also want to get to know your neighbors.  Having a good relationship with your neighbors will make owning a hunting property much more enjoyable.

An early conversation with your neighbors should include the following statement from you:
“If you hit a deer and it runs onto my land, just go get it.”

Your neighbor will most likely respond the same way.  Wounded deer running onto neighboring properties has been known to strain relationships.  In many states you are legally allowed to trespass in order to collect a dear that you have shot.  But it is always better for you to talk to your neighbors before that happens.

Your neighbors are probably unlikely to give you trespassing problems if you have friendly relations with them.  

When you have some need to walk on their property instead of yours, then consider if you would mind if you were the landowner and they were the one considering walking on your property.  If you would mind, if you were in their place, then don’t do it.

You may want to take note of when your neighbors are around.  If you are trailing a deer, or need help dragging one out, then having friends nearby is good.  You should be willing to help with their deer too.  Compliment their deer and be pleasant.  It is much better to have friendly neighbor relations, than it is to have unfriendly relations.

You’ll have neighbors who have different hunting goals than you do.  This may be frustrating when you let bucks go and your neighbor shoots all that he can.  There is not much you can do, or should do, to move his opinion to where yours is.  You might explain that you are letting the small bucks go because they won’t get big if you shoot them when they are small.  Bringing the point up repeatedly may annoy your neighbor to the point that he wants to shoot lots of small bucks just out of spite.  Showing this neighbor the deer or pictures of the deer that you shoot will be more effective in convincing someone to let small bucks go.

Don’t get too frustrated with a neighbor who shoots small bucks.  Its his property and he can do what he likes.  And the distance between a property that is filled with big bucks and one that lacks deer may not be far.  

A few years ago a neighbor shot a buck fawn which ran 150 yards off of his property and fell right underneath my treestand.  I reverse trailed the blood trail to find the hunters and found them coming for the deer.  They had only seen a handful of deer, of any size, during the few days prior and I had let several medium sized bucks go, not 200 yards from where they were hunting on that very morning.  Despite the fact that we share a property line, they who shoot lots of does and small bucks see a few small deer, and I have had opportunities at lots of bucks.

It may get annoying when your neighbor shoots a buck, but you just have to accept it and congratulate him.

Some neighbors can be jerks and there isn’t much you can do about it.  By try not to intentionally antagonize them.  When you talk to them try doing so like you do with family members who, perhaps, have a different political persuasion.  Be polite, but try to avoid the things that don’t need to be discussed.

The biggest problem that you are likely to have is your neighbors putting up their treestands right next to your property line.  There is not much you can do about this, unless they trespass.  You may want to place a “no trespassing” sign in front of their stand, if they get too close.  Or you may prefer to put a Quality Deer Management Association sing there instead.  A sign that says “QDMA is practiced here” is much less confrontational than a sign that says “no trespassing.”

Sometimes you’ll need to put your stand near a neighbor’s property.  It’s a good idea to put these stands up so that they clearly face away from the neighbor’s property.  Sometimes you need to be near the line, but try not to look like you are hunting over their land.

If you are reasonable with your neighbors, then they will most likely be reasonable as well.  Having people nearby who can help move deer, or tow your truck out can be valuable to have.  Think of the golden rule and you shouldn’t have many neighbor problems.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Advice on My Book Please

I'm up to 20,000 words in my forthcoming deer hunting book and I have just begun the equipment descriptions and recommendations.

I have a question that I would like my readers' advice on.

My introduction ends, currently, as follows:


Some people criticize hunters for being bloodthirsty, or whatever.  I am not writing this book to explain why I hunt or the morals for doing so.  Thing are born, they live, and they die.  This happens regardless of whether or not we hunt.  If things did not die, then there would be no room for new things.  Killing a deer with a quick shot is much more humane that the many other ways that deer die.  Wolves may start to eat a deer before it is totally dead, and they’ll kill it by biting it.  I’d rather get shot than killed by wolves.  Some animals kill by biting their victim and then waiting until its wound becomes so infected that it dies.  Deer also get hit by cars, and some limp off or die a slow death by having all of their organs crushed.

Someone that criticizes hunting and eats meat is a hypocrite.  Someone who criticizes hunting and wears leather is a hypocrite.  Someone who criticizes hunting and uses bug spray or mouse traps is a hypocrite.  Someone who criticizes hunting and eats dead plants is a hypocrite.

I have no time for those who criticize hunting.  There is almost no other point in human history that they would have survived without hunting and killing or having someone else do their hunting and killing for them.

That’s enough of that.  On to how to shoot as many of the biggest bucks that you can.
I think that this subject needs to be mentioned, at least.  But it is a bit of a downer.  And I don't like the idea of containing sad, annoying, or otherwise unhappy crap in my book.

My question is: should I include the above passage in my introduction, or elsewhere, should I leave it out, or should I improve it or change it?

Any advice would be appreciated.

Let me know if you have any deer hunting related questions that you want to have for sure answered in my book.

Also check out my hunting blog Shoot Deer.

Happy hunting,

Tim

Thursday, February 14, 2013

My Book, Update

I'm writing a book on deer hunting for new deer hunters.

Time in the Tree is the working title.  This title idea was inspired by the title of the book Time on the Water by Bill Gardner.

At one time I thought that my book might read like his, as a journal of the days.  But I am a terrible journal writer and I did not take very good notes through the last hunting season.  The few thoughts that I did record may be included, but they will not be a large part of the book.

It has been day after day of no writing followed by writing several thousand words in one sitting.  I relate this point because authors are often asked about when and how they write.

As of this post I have around 14,400 words written, in MS Word, through sixteen chapter ideas.  And I have not really gotten to the actual hunting part yet.

Before writing I looked up how many words should be in a book.  The result that I got was 60,000 words.  That is my goal, sort of.  My book may be 40,000 words or 100,000.  I would like it to cover all of the necessary parts with a little bit of background information.

I realize that many books get around 1/3 of their content trimmed before being published.  This is a good idea even if my book will be self published, not published by a professional publisher.  Trim the fat.

Fully, or partially, written chapters so far:

  1. Who? What? Why? When? Where? How?  
  2. About the whitetail deer
  3. Antlers, not horns
  4. Where, generally, to hunt for deer
  5. Alternatives to hunting your own private land
  6. Improving your hunting property, the not so fun part
  7. Improving your hunting property, the fun part
  8. Food plots
  9. How to make your food plots
  10. Methods of hunting whitetail deer (should me moved to after "Where, generally...")
  11. Stand locating
  12. Trail, or game, cameras
  13. Types of deer stands
  14. The ideal stand
  15. Treestand recommendations
  16. How to place your treestand  
These are the working titles for the chapters that have been roughly written or outlined so far.

This post was written with the idea that the process of writing a book c might be interesting itself.

If you have any suggestions, or comments, for my first book, then I will be happy to hear them.

My book is about learning to hunt deer.  Perhaps this blog will include learning how to write and self publish a book. 

(The book will be better proofread than the posts here.

Happy hunting.