FlatusGiganticus

FlatusGiganticus t1_j2c9eab wrote

Keeping them conditioned with the correct types of oils helps keep the moisture out and lubricates the fibers. This keeps the leather more supple, the fibers more flexible, prevents dry rot, wet rot, mold and mildew, and means the leather doesn't disintegrate and crack as quickly, and will most certainly make it last a lot longer. It is very obvious on items like saddles, but it applies to boots and other leather items as well.

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FlatusGiganticus t1_j2blsnx wrote

The migrants, smugglers, coyotes etc are far less likely to bother you if you are armed. Our family friend sees them crossing his property all the time and messing with his infrastructure (cutting fences, messing with out buildings, stealing etc), but they very typically avoid him. The saddest part is when he finds a body, or whats left of one. This isn't him, but its an example of what is going on.

You also have feral hogs, coyotes, bobcats, mountain lions, black bears, Russian boars that get to over 500lbs are aren't shy etc. These ranches are pretty large and remote, so you are on your own out there. Our friend's ranch is several sections, so its huge, but small compared to a lot of them in the area. I have neighbors on much smaller acreage that have rifles in their trucks by default, but that's strictly for varmints.

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FlatusGiganticus t1_j2az6mt wrote

Tell me you have an AR in your UTV. If not, why not?

I have a close family friend with a ranch in deep south Texas. I promise you, he's very well armed any time he's out on the property. AR in his gater, AR in his truck. 45 on his hip. It's a necessity. Too many people don't understand what is going on down there and they think it's an overreaction. They need to spend some time down there.

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