Your inner voice - and why you should listen to it.

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A quick check of my Game Book, tells me that I was last out with a rifle on the 21st December - knocking on for three months.

I will not bore you (actually I probably will) with the details, but I drive a 110 and she has spent the best part of two months waiting for new front half-axle, diff locky things changing. Long short. I get dicked about by the (latest) garage which lets me know towards the end of February, that they cannot now fit her in (as promised) for the end of December.😖

"Don't worry sir, I have spoken to a friend of mine. He is a Landrover wizard although he is hard to get hold of..."

Eventually the "Wizard" returns my messages.

"I will phone you tomorrow, when I have the diary in front of me".

Two weeks of nothing pass - before I block and then delete this **** from my contacts.

I return to my (original) garage - he has had a cancellation and I can drop it around now. Excellent. Except it isn't is it. The damn thing will not start - it has been sat (unused) in the cold for so long the battery is flat. Thanks to a similar occurrence last season, whilst on the Reds down in Devon, I have a battery charger thingy. I stick it on and an hour later, she has enough life to fire up, and I drive her across.

By the end of the day, she is all done. The price? Do you remember that Premium Bond win 'we' had this month? Funny thing. It was that price.
Easy come, easy go.🙄

At least I can make a plan to go out. With various events about to overtake me, this may be that last opportunity for some months.

0300 hours this morning, finds me trying to start the truck. It is dead. It is as dead as a Monty Python, Norwegian Blue. FFS!

I eventually jump it with my wife's car. Every fibre in my body is telling me not to venture out.

I half listen. Instead of heading straight off to the farm, I divert over to the nearest motorway. I will blat up and down that for a few junctions and force some life back into the battery. The on-road onto the motorway is blocked off. Really? I turn around and go home. Safely back on the driveway, I turn the truck off and wait. If it does not start, at least I am back home. If it starts, then I am good to go. It started. I set off (again) to the Estate. Still not listening to that voice...

There were road closures everywhere, and local motorway traffic was being diverted through the villages. It was dreadful. Again, I ignored the voice in my head, and pressed on.


Eventually, I get to the Estate, kit up and trudge (the ground is absolutely sodden) to a High Seat. It is still dark, and so I have about an hour to play with the TI before light. Eventually, the dark gives way to the dawn, and at 0550 hours that miracle of the 'Dawn Corus" begins.

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There is mist in the air, and the TI does not like the mist.

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Then away off to my right, in the next field, I spy a Roe head. I dismount and make towards the gate into the field in which they are. I set up the sticks and have another look. It is a Doe and she is couched up with just her head and neck visible.


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The backstop is not good. The ground is waterlogged. I am worried that my truck will not start. I really do need to listen to my 'inner voice'.

I call it.

I am just not in the right frame of mind, to be out with a rifle - and I am (just) big enough and ugly enough, to recognise that.

Back at the truck (much earlier that anticipated), she kicks into life, and I mouth a 'thank you' to the Gods of Landrover.

I make it home and do what I should have done yesterday - stick the battery on a charge.



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So there we have it.

Pretty much a disaster from the word go.


Which leaves me with a couple of questions.


Have you ever recognised it was right to 'call it off' when out with a rifle?

Will the battery recover, or do I need to buy a new one (if so which one)?


Looking at the diary - I do not anticipate that I will able to be get on the deer again until at least June.


C'est la vie
 
Aye I was all set to go, always prep the day or night before, decided an afternoon into the evening session was on the cards for the following day .
LSS the next day there was to much playing on my mind life admin wise and I called it, McWifey looked at me and asked you not going out ? My reply, no not in the right frame of mind and with that I didn’t even cross the front door .
 
Have you ever recognised it was right to 'call it off' when out with a rifle?

Will the battery recover, or do I need to buy a new one (if so which one)?

Looking at the diary - I do not anticipate that I will able to be get on the deer again until at least June.
Yes, but press-on "itis" is VERY difficult to suppress. Sadly, IMHO we put ourselves under way too much pressure nowadays - I'm reluctantly coming to the conclusion I'm trying to do too much:confused:

Does it have a "porthole" showing a green-glow? If it does, you maybe lucky. If it has a porthole that's showing black, get another! Indeed, just get another - the cost compared to your time/frustration is minimal.

WoW - I do hope you have your priorities "sorted" - there's a lot of deer to drop between now and the end of the month/Apr!
 
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I had a similar afternoon a few months ago. I drive out the village in my 110 DCPU and the river has burst its banks and the water is just coming over the bonnet. I turn around and drive the long way around out of the village. I get my kit out, turn on thermal spotter and thermal scope and start my stalk in this heavy woodland.
After 20minutes or so I spot my first roe doe, I mount the rifle to take the shot and I'd forgot to turn the scope on.... or so I thought. It wouldnt turn on as the battery was dead.
That's it, home time then.
 
We have a friend.....let's call him "Lucky Barry" .........
He has a season ticket with every recovery company in the UK (and some parts of Europe), if it can go wrong - it will and it won't just be some trifling minor hiccup. It doesn't matter whether he's on his various motorbikes or in a car the end result will always be the same, so much so that all of his friends find different routes to take so they don't have to witness the ensuing debacle!

Me, I've had a fair few fishing trips when things didn't look right, but I've persevered for no appreciable reward whatsoever........never learn....never listen to the voice in your head saying "don't do it". Just another example of "character building".......:rofl:
 
get a new battery! nothing worse than being out at daft o'clock with a flat battery in the middle of nowhere and have to sleep in your car till someone's awake to come and get you,trust me I know 🤣.
also put an amp meter on the battery terminal to check for a volt drain .
 
PS, buy a new battery and rig up an "Optimate" type trickle charger if you can - it'll save you endless problems - just remember to disconnect it before driving anywhere:doh:
Exactly this ^^^^^ - I think I have 3 or 4. Both the quad and Countax ride-on mower sit permanently on 2 and are always ready to go! They are NOT expensive! CTEK are best IMHO.
 
Modern car batteries fail to store a charge quite suddenly, so you probably needed a new battery even before you fried it.

You now most definitely do need a new battery.

May I suggest you acquire some basic mechanical skills and tools if you’re going to hang on to that Land Rover?
Otherwise you’ll pauperise yourself and your family to the fourth generation.
They are maintenance hungry monsters that will happily devour as much time and money as you are prepared to lavish on them, all the while remaining stubbornly and fundamentally unreliable and being a complete pain in the arse to work on besides.
This is why your local mechanics want nothing to do with it, on 20 year old Land Rovers there is no such thing as a simple 5 minute job, everything takes hours and days and every single job will expand into unforeseen mechanical areas and levels of expense that you never dreamed possible.
The damn thing will also fight you with stubborn malignancy every step of the way.

Have a dander around your local Aldi and Lidl middle aisles, steer clear of the welding helmets and air compressors for now, basic spanner’s, sockets and screwdrivers are your first acquisitions and they’re both cheap to acquire and easy to use
( honestly ).
An old fashioned Haynes manual will be a worthwhile investment.
Ultimately your new hobby will save you a fortune, not only will you no longer be at the mercy of rapacious unreliable mechanics, you just won’t have much time for shooting or hand loading, let alone time major wasting fripperies like bore slugging or creating .310 Cadet cases from .32/20 brass.

You could start your journey by buying and fitting the new battery yourself. You’ll need 2 spanner’s , probably 13mm.

Caution, there is a very definite right way and a wrong way to do this, if you do it the wrong way you will need another new battery and an appointment with a specialist vehicle electrician.
Get it right and the glow of smug satisfaction will last until lunchtime.
Best of luck, you’re going to need it.
 
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Couldn't have said it better myself @dunwater .
My experiance with a Series 3 restoration taught me everything I ever need to know about Landrovers... avoid...
PS, our old girl is now on an adventure to Africa... purchased by a young adventurous couple ;)
 
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