The Hunter Build
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The Pocket Deer Hunting Guide
Author: Stephen D. Carpenteri
language: en
Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing Inc.
Release Date: 2010-10-06
Whether it's learning about rifles and shotguns, determining the best hunting location, or butchering your five-point buck, here is all the essential information to have a successful and fun hunting experience in a compact, portable guidebook. Complete with handy illustrations and photographs, The Pocket Deer Hunting Guide is the essential reference guidebook for any deer hunter. Skyhorse Publishing is proud to publish a broad range of books for hunters and firearms enthusiasts. We publish books about shotguns, rifles, handguns, target shooting, gun collecting, self-defense, archery, ammunition, knives, gunsmithing, gun repair, and wilderness survival. We publish books on deer hunting, big game hunting, small game hunting, wing shooting, turkey hunting, deer stands, duck blinds, bowhunting, wing shooting, hunting dogs, and more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to publishing books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked by other publishers and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.
The Rough Start Guide to Treasure Hunting
The Rough Start Guide to Treasure Hunting is a serious field manual for readers who want to understand treasure hunting as it really is, not as fantasy, folklore, or social media performance, but as a practical discipline built on research, permissions, land access, site reading, object handling, law, judgment, and patience. This book begins with the familiar image most people have in mind, the metal detector in a field, but it does not stay there. It opens the subject properly. Treasure hunting is presented as a broad and demanding world that includes coin hunting, relic recovery, prospecting for gold and gemstones, fossil finds, underwater search, wreck related recovery, archival research, provenance, storage, market value, and the legal line between an honest find and a compromised one. It treats hidden value as part history, part fieldcraft, part business, and part discipline. Rather than promising easy riches or repeating romantic myths, this guide explains how real searchers think. It looks at why some ground produces better results than others, how routes and crossings concentrate loss, how old maps and archives can turn guesswork into target selection, how finds should be recorded and grouped, how significance changes the way a site must be handled, and why permissions and reporting are not side issues but the foundation of the whole trade. Inside the book you will find material on: metal detecting and everyday field recovery permissions, land access, and legal realities reading routes, crossings, fields, shorelines, and work sites coins, relics, hoards, caches, and grouped finds fossils, bones, and ancient life gold, gemstones, and natural prospecting rivers, wrecks, and submerged losses maps, archives, oral history, and the deep reading of place remote sensing, drones, sonar, lidar, and technical search tools finds handling, provenance, storage, and cataloguing dealers, auction houses, value, and the market after discovery the difference between finding and taking This is not a picture book of fantasies about buried pirate chests. It is a practical handbook for readers who want to know how hidden objects are really found, how sites are really understood, and how a searcher can move from loose curiosity to something far more competent and deliberate. It is suitable for: beginners who want a serious introduction instead of shallow hype metal detectorists who want to improve how they read sites and record finds relic hunters and prospectors who want a broader framework for the trade fossil hunters who want to see their work placed within a larger discovery economy readers interested in archaeology, fieldcraft, landscape history, and hidden material culture collectors who want to understand provenance, grouping, and market value better landowners, researchers, and enthusiasts who want to know how the subject works in practice It is especially well suited to readers who enjoy books that combine practical instruction with historical depth and who want something more intelligent than a simple beginner’s guide. The tone is direct, serious, and grounded. It assumes that the reader can handle complexity and wants substance. If you have ever wondered where treasure really comes from, how good searchers choose their ground, why some finds matter more than others, how a field turns into a site, how a site turns into evidence, or how a discovery moves from soil to storage to market, this book was written for you. This is a guide to treasure hunting for people who want to do the subject properly.