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With no chance for success, you would not hunt. Without the prospect of failure hunting would have no merit. I don't hunt to kill, I kill because I hunt. Remember a moderate hit is lots more effective than a high powered miss. Best of luck.

Monday, May 30, 2016

THEY JUST KEEP COMING . . . AND COMING . . .AND COMING . . .

Memorial Day 2016 -- I took the morning off and met up with Mr. Bob at his Chizzler Reaper trailer in Iron County, Utah.  He and I started the adventure at around 8:30 a.m.  The chizzlers were already there in scrambling around big time numbers waiting for us, and eating lots of alfalfa.  We loaded our .22 LR caliber rifles and started to "reap" them in vast quantities.  Bob and I went straight to work.  We didn't really get to chat and reminisce of olden days reaping chizzlers.  We were surrounded by targets and the more we shot, it seemed, the more they came up out of their underground hides (condos).
Bob is all business.

103 Yards from the squirrel-o-matic

A whole condo complex taken out.

We shot for 2 1/2 hours.  I kept loading my 3 magazines (2 ea. 10 round and 1ea. 5 round) and then would concentrate on each individual shot.  Focus for the shot, hold on the appropriate stadia line on the vertical crosshair, allow for Kentucky windage if necessary,  hold breath, press trigger consistently and follow through.  I was hitting the critters at from 10 to 134 yards with good consistency, over 70% I think.   I was not there to waste ammunition -- I was there to waste chizzlers.  Chizzlers were being reaped by the dozens.  Bob and I finally had to take a break at around 10:30 a.m.  The number or potential targets had not subsided to any great degree, but our fingers were sore from loading magazines and my scope eye was tired and needed a rest.  {You probably don't understand scope eye tired, but hours of concentrated eye use behind a spotting scope looking for game or targeting chizzlers while hunting will make your eye rather fatigued.  Actually, it is a lovely experience.}

I took a few old Herd Bulls in my efforts.  They are big targets but they don't go down easy to a 22 LR.  I had to head shoot some of  the monster chizzlers to anchor them.  I like to get the old ones out of the gene pool.  They are too big, they eat too much, and they have an attitude.  They seem to think they are wearing tiny kevlar vests or something.  They come and go as they please in their world, they knock around the smaller chizzlers, and they are cannibals.  Yes, they eat the dead ones or almost dead ones that are shot in their proximity.
red outline for cannibals
By 11:30 a.m. I was exhausted. My trigger finger has a slight blister, my shooting eye is exhausted, and I was more or less, out of ammo.  I had fired 300+ rounds of 22 LR.  I congratulated Bob on a wonderful shoot.  I packed up my gear.  I took these photos.  I drove home.  What a day !

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

A HUNTER---ING WE WILL GO !



My grandson and I went up to Iron County to help the farmers again.  Monday morning, 5-23-2016, we did our duty for agriculture and for "fun".  Hunter is a pretty darn good shot.  He harvested several dozen of the little profit eaters.  YES, I was/am proud of him.  He is a great kid {straight "A" student, honorable Deacon at church, active Boy Scout, great poet, helps with whatever job around the house or work project . . .} and a good shot, what else is there?  {Hopefully, someday he will learn to cook as well as his dad.}




Wednesday, May 18, 2016

HERD BULLS

I have been trying to get up to Iron County to hunt chizzlers as often as work will allow.  The major problem is: work won't allow it enough !  I always tell my friends, and family, and anyone who will listen, that "work gets in the way of having fun."  I did manage to get away on Monday, 5-16-16, and hunt for about two hours.  Unfortunately, in mid morning the weather started to go against me -- dark clouds, wind, and the rain started to fall.  I left the field of extermination way before I was ready {I actually still had some ammo.} and went back to work in Santa Clara.  I did manage to shoot about 200 chizzlers in the short time I was there.  The farmers are so glad to have the crop eating demons out of their economic picture.  I haven't written too much about my hunting adventures of late, sorry.  Maybe some photos will make up for my absence in cyber space. ?

Gang of chizzlers and one herd bull.

95 yards from the truck and they thought they were out of range.

Spy looking out of hole left me only a head shot.

2 herd bulls with a pistol to give relative size idea.