What’s the story behind your profile pic?

Alan

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I'm wondering what made you pick your profile pic, some folks use their favorite firearm, a hunting memory or just a good laugh. If you don’t have one yet, what’s holding you back? Let’s hear the meaning (or mischief) behind your DP!
 
My pic is of my card that I use to pass out to people that were having problems with coyotes. For a while I was working with a game agent on a few outings.

Here is a picture of the whole card, minus my name, and ph. # of course.



CallingCard.webp
 
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My High School mascot that was changed by the city without even asking anyone if they minded.
Then lied about the origins of the mascot.
 
My pic is of my card that I use to pass out to people that were having problems with coyotes. For a while I was working with a game agent on a few outings.

Here is a picture of the whole card, minus my name, and ph. # of course.



View attachment 81
That's cool, it makes for a great profile pic with a meaningful story behind it.
 
My High School mascot that was changed by the city without even asking anyone if they minded.
Then lied about the origins of the mascot.
Using it as your profile pic makes a strong statement and keeps that piece of history alive
 
I had almost finished my last season doing my field research for my Master's Thesis on black bears and we realized that I had taken pictures of all my bears and everyone except myself. This is the last bear we trapped and collared in a schoolyard in Pasadena, CA. It was just done awakening when I got in there for the picture!

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I used to be a commercial fisherman. This pic was the first Red Crab of the season when I was still a crewman in the mid '80's. That was back when nobody ever wore any type of pfd, and boats weren't even required to have a liferaft on board. Of course that was way before it was dangerous or "The Deadliest Catch". Hahahaaa! Back in the "Derby Days" for longlining Halibut, and seemingly endless Bairdi, and Black Cod seasons.
 
That picture was taken by a photographer on July 4th one year at the Smithfield Plantation that is smack in the middle of Virginia Tech. It was built in 1774 by Colonel William Preston for his new wife. He named it Smithfield in honor of her family. The University was built around it and totally surrounds the grounds.

I was reenacting in a couple of units at the time. One was the Virginia 7th Regiments (yes plural is correct), which primarily participated in reenactments in the tidewater areas of Virginia, as well as in other states. The VA7th was quite large and I was a member of the rifle company. The other one was the Virginia 9th regiment, which was known to have done some recruiting there during the war. They were all members from around the Roanoke, VA general area and there weren't a lot of us. About half of them were also members of the VA7th, and most of the rest were from Explore Park where they volunteered, as did I, at the Vause Stockade portraying the 1750's time period with hand-built buildings and stockade. Instead of having 40 to 100-tents set up like the VA7th could, we typically 4 to 10 tents.

I wish I could remember what the comment was that got me laughing. I remembered the laughing but not what caused it. The full-length version of that picture was actually used by the Smithfield plantation as the cover of the brochure they provided to visitors. It was good times with good people with amazingly diverse versions of Brunswick Stew for dinner on at least one night. It was never the same, as Brunswick Stew was basically made out of whatever you had on hand at the time. To be perfectly honest, one fellow's wife loved to throw these stews together so she would make the stew a day ahead, put it in the fridge, and then her husband would bring it in a big pot and we'd heat it over the open fire for most of the day. They were always delicious!

Smithfield Plantation - Mansion.
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me:

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The bare-bones VA 9th Regiment recruitment company:
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We were always looking for musicians, especially drummers:
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And here's some shots of the VA7th, which I mentioned was much larger. They also had 2 cannons. Here's one in use and you can easily see what the "Fog of War" was when multiple cannons were being employed:
VA7crewFiringCannon..webp


If I recall correctly this reenactment was of the Battle of Brandywine, in Pennsylvania. There are multiple rows of tents here at the Continental Army contingent. I think we had about 20-tents there and one of our two cannons. At the end of the reenactment both sides gave cannon demonstrations where the opposing tried to rush the cannons. If we were reasonably in the path of a cannon we were required to become a casualty to more accurately display the results of cannon fire. it was quite an experience having 12 cannons fire at you! You tried to stay out of the 60° cone in front of the cannon because of the percussion from firing the big blank charges. I found myself inside that cone once and immediately dropped to the ground just before they fired it...that was really LOUD as you felt the percussive wave pass over you. After that shot I crawled out of that cone as a wounded soldier might and "died" on the battlefield waiting for the mass resurrection at the end.
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One of the cool things we did here was build facine breastworks. We cheated on this though. We did stand up vertical saplings and weave horizontal saplings in and out of them until they were abut 6-ft tall. Then we'd tie them up and move these ~10-ft sections into place, which is exactly how the colonist built fortifications so quickly. When they were in place, they'd then dig trenches in front of and sometimes behind the fortification putting all the soil from the trenches on the sides of the facines. Making the facines was surprisingly quick work; digging the trenches was what took the longest. HOWEVER, we had a back hoe that came in and dug out the kitchens. I can tell you about those kitchens later if you are interested. They were kind enough to give us the dirt from that digging, so we didn't really dig any trenches The open spots you see in the wall is for the cannon batteries.
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And this is our Captain Mike Cecere (yes, the author), as he sits in a battery inspecting the start of another series of facines in front of him. That's my rifle behind him and to the right. The Continental Army was badly beaten at Brandywine, but was able to retreat without losing the entire army. And, it was a fun and enlightening experience to reenact. No wonder the British were amazed at how quickly the Continental's could build fortifications. The facines were quick to make and if you have enough men digging the trenches for the earthworks, a lot could be done in one night.
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Dang I would fit right in there.
BTW wearing a military cocked hat with civilian garb, the Crown would consider you a spy.

CYA at the Monroe trade show maybe, its a long way for us.
More apt to hit the Enumclaw show, and its a long ways, just not as long as Monroe.

Oh yeah my Rice barrel is 1/60, don't hate it until you try it :cool:
 
Very interesting. I'll read and enjoy anything you care to write about. My wife and I have always wanted to tour the various battlefields of PA, VA and MD, but to our everlasting regret did not do so. Now we're too old, but have watched every Ken Burns story to fill in the gap.
My profile pic: we'd just rescued a cat and I took a photo to show family. I think it was the first photo I came to when searching for the profile.
 
Very interesting. I'll read and enjoy anything you care to write about. My wife and I have always wanted to tour the various battlefields of PA, VA and MD, but to our everlasting regret did not do so. Now we're too old, but have watched every Ken Burns story to fill in the gap.
My profile pic: we'd just rescued a cat and I took a photo to show family. I think it was the first photo I came to when searching for the profile.
When I worked for US Fish and Wildlife, we had pretty much a 2-weeks of mandatory training. One week of mostly technical (Endangered Species Act, NEPA, OSHA, etc.) and one week chosen with our supervisor in a subject that interested us. My second year I was chosen for a 6-month leadership course (two weeks at the training center in West Virginia, 6-months working on a team project, followed by one week presenting our project to a panel made up of the Secretary of the Interior, Director of USFWS, Regional directors, etc. (6-8 panel members). At that time, we could postpone our return and add annual leave on. Well, I flew my wife home at the conclusion of the course, converted the government funded rental car to a privately rented one, and we toured Jamestown, Gettysburg, Antietam (our training center was just across the Potomac), Harper's Ferry, Williamsburg and a few smaller ones.

Our take: Gettysburg was too commercial, although we stayed at a historic "haunted" inn in town. Lots of screaming kids, although areas such as the Devil's Den and the Cornfield were interesting. Antietam, especially the sunken road, was similar to the Custer Battlefield: very sobering and reverential! Harper's Ferry was really interesting (I had gone there with several buddies during the weekend of the two-week initial meeting and went back with my wife later).

Now I'm retired and 75+ and am really glad I was able to go. We did another trip with my late mother, took her to Yellowstone and to Alaska/Denali. Fond times!

2006 - Alaska with Patti, Anita, Evie (poor scan).webp
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Dang I would fit right in there.
BTW wearing a military cocked hat with civilian garb, the Crown would consider you a spy.

CYA at the Monroe trade show maybe, its a long way for us.
More apt to hit the Enumclaw show, and its a long ways, just not as long as Monroe.

Oh yeah my Rice barrel is 1/60, don't hate it until you try it :cool:
The fellow pictured there is Mike Cecere. He is a historian who has published a lot books about the Revolutionary War, all with primary documentation references and lots of detail. So either that wasn't necessarily the case, they really didn't care; or perhaps as a militia member it was the only hat they had.. The Brits also promised to execute any colonist who was shooting buck and ball instead of just a single ball...and then they turned around and did it themselves from time to time. It's surprising how common loading buck and ball was by the end of the war.

Most of the Virginia Regiments wore a Virginia Round hat like the one in my picture and actually Mike had one of those too. The militia members wore whatever clothing they had of course, and whatever hat they hat had because they were civilians who were called up to fight in various battles. My 4th Great Grandfather, John Akers, got called up 3 times for about 3-months each during the war and the last one of those was the Battle of Yorktown. After I moved to Washington from Virginia, I found out that he had built a cabin on the Black River between Boones Mill and Rocky Mount, VA. It was about 6 or 7-miles from where I lived just outside of Boones Mill, and I had fly-fished on the Black River a number of times.

I made mine from a round blank cutting the brim of a hat blank fairly short (3") but leaving the left side at 4" because I needed to turn up that side. This was from a Virginia 7th Regiments pattern. It was a round hat with the left side turned up so when the command to "Shoulder Arms" was issued, your gun (musket or rifle) didn't knock your hat off. "Shoulder Arms" was always over the left shoulder until sometime after the Civil War if I recall correctly. They usually put something in that turned up side of the Virginia Round Hat, most commonly a white tail deer tail. Since I am a fly-tier, I had one in my fly-tying supplies and put it right on my hat.

Here's my Virginia Round hat when I first made it:

Virginia Round Hat New.webp


And here it is after many years of use:

Virginia Round Hat_Old.webp


The VA7 pewter button is not historically correct but was used by almost everyone in the regiment because one of he guys in our regiment carved a mold out of soap stone and cast a bunch of them for us.

Also, the Garb that mike is wearing is/was the default uniform for the VA 7th Rifle Company under Daniel Morgan's command because virtually all of them were Longhunters and that's what they wore when hunting. In fact, in July of 1775 when General George Washington assumed command of the newly formed Continental Army, he called for that hunting shirt (called a shirt, looks like what we'd call an open-front smock today) as a uniform for the Army. He partly did that because of the the rifle company from Virginia that had arrived in Cambridge wearing that garb. The deadly reputation of riflemen wearing that fringed linen hunting shirt preceded them and they were both much easier to make than a wool regimental coat, and also intimidating as riflemen were known for being deadly accurate at long distances (200 to 250-yards or more). So until the Lottery coats arrived in 1778, it was considered a de facto uniform. Even after the Lottery Coats arrived from France, there weren't enough to go around so they held a lottery to see which regiments would receive them...thus,"Lottery Coats." Throughout the war there were never enough Regimentals for everyone so seeing folks in civilian garb in the line was pretty common.

I was bummed this last year that there was no Monroe Trade Show, because I live all of about 12 to 15-miles away from it in the town of Duvall, WA, and I didn't make it to the other locale where it was held. I always like attending that show.
 
they really didn't care; or perhaps as a militia member it was the only hat they had.
I had a black one for over 20 years before I found out the difference between the two.
The outfit he is wearing is dang near identical to my New York frontiersman AKA Long Hunter.

This is my second one after the black one fell a part. I did not know when I made this that the front corner is narrower than the back two. Made from a felt black I bought at the Monroe many decades ago.
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Did not know the southern boys copied a 50 year old design from them damn yankees.
 
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I had a black one for over 20 years before I found out the difference between the two.
The outfit he is wearing is dang near identical to my New York frontiersman AKA Long Hunter.

This is my second one after the black one fell a part. I did not know when I made this that the front corner is narrower than the back two. Made from a felt black I bought at the Monroe many decades ago.
View attachment 99

Did not know the southern boys copied a 50 year old design from them damn yankees.
Mike was the captain of the VA7th for the last 6 or 7-years I was a member. We had three others before him. He was a member of the rifle company before he was elected captain and he tends to wear rifleman (Longhunter) attire. Before his tricorn he was wearing a Virginia Round Hat like I pictured in my earlier post. I think he was pressured to go with the tricorn because he was the captain. I never really thought a lot about it.

The actual hat that Longhunters in Virginia wore was basically a wide brimmed round hat. The wide brim kept the sun out of his eyes and the rain off his neck. The Virginia round hat was developed from that hat because you couldn't shoulder arms with the standard Longhunter's hat without knocking the hat off when you did so. So they just turned the left side up so their rifle wouldn't hit it. I presume (dangerous thing to do) that they trimmed the rest of the brim down to 3" because it was ungainly with it turned up on one side and laying out 4" from your head on the opposite side. In any case, the Virginia Round Hat was what most of the Virginians wore and it had that shorter 3" brim everywhere but where it was turned up (cocked) The brim on the turn up was 4" because it took up some space to turn it up.

Joseph Ruckman published a great little book many years ago by the title "Recreating the American Longhunter: 1740-1790". He was also one of the founders of the Rev List that was THE forum for everything 18th Century. If your reference is earlier than 1740...you may have something. But if it's not, they you can't claim it was copied from the Yankees.

Funny thing happened when I moved from Vermont to Virginia in 2005. My wife was still in VT and had forbidden me to go fishing until I rented a place for us to live. I finally found an old General Store built in 1906 that had been converted to a residence in ~1985 on Naff Road just north of Boones Mill, VA. When I wanted to look at the place, the folks renting it out said to come by around 10AM and they'd show it to me. Thought my wife would like it when I saw it because she likes old things and this previous General Store had a lot of character and an old Gas Pump on the front porch. We had a fallow cornfield behind the house and a hardwood forest behind it as you went up the mountain. A major 4-lane highway VA-220 was about half a mile away and some horse stables were down the road. And it was really quiet there too.

So we moved in and the next morning were greeted by a car horn that played the opening motif to "Dixie" at 5:30AM. Having just arrived from Vermont, we still had Vermont plates on it. I changed those really quick. He continued to hit that horn every weekday morning for months. Besides that horn every morning, we found that Naff Road was a very heavily trafficked road. Come to find out it was a shortcut to get over to the West end of Roanoke instead of driving into the middle of Roanoke and then heading west. You best believe the folks we rented it from knew that too. After I left VA in 2015 I found out that my family on my mother's side, the Akers, were some of the very earliest settlers in Virginia in the early 1600's. Also found out that my 4th Great Grandfather fought in the Revolutionary War including the Battle of Yorktown. Folks at my work in Roanoke would refer to me as a Yankee even though I was raised in CA, because I moved from Vermont down to Virginia. Some of them were a bit uppity about it and I just wish I knew of my family's history there before I left. My 4th Great Grandfather, John Akers, actually built a cabin on the Black River, about 6 miles away from where we lived. Wish I knew that before I left....
 

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