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Hunting
Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Predator calling
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<blockquote data-quote="DSheetz" data-source="post: 3000402" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>There are several states where you can hunt lions. Find out the contact information to the states fish and game departments that you would be interested in hunting them in and ask them for out of state hunting regulations. In Wyoming lions are considered a trophy animal. There are several people that guide hunts for them, be ready for a long day and a lot of foot time in some fairly rough country. I have seen them take leaps of 15-20 feet at times. I was up on the mountain in a new 6" snow and saw some antelope bunched up being all kinds of alert. When I got to looking there was a lion crouched down watching them. As I disturbed its hunt it took off making long bounds then went into a canyon around half a mile away. Like other cats they move slowly most of the time and I believe that several times callers call them but just don't see them, or they might not stay on stand long enough for them to come to where they could be seen, where did that tan rock come from type of thing. High volume is not your friend when calling cats, with an e-caller mid to low volume with hand calls wearing the brown jersey cloth gloves mutes the sound. Again, they will circle around behind you, often only finding tracks left in snow or dusty ground telling the caller that they were being watched. Study the cats in your neighborhood when their people let them run, they act much the same as bobcats and lions do. Try calling a few of them to see what works on them and take lessons from that to the field with you. I have practiced my calling in all types of settings not only out in the field trying to call the target animal, but just targeting an animal to see how it would react, so I could learn from it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 3000402, member: 91783"] There are several states where you can hunt lions. Find out the contact information to the states fish and game departments that you would be interested in hunting them in and ask them for out of state hunting regulations. In Wyoming lions are considered a trophy animal. There are several people that guide hunts for them, be ready for a long day and a lot of foot time in some fairly rough country. I have seen them take leaps of 15-20 feet at times. I was up on the mountain in a new 6" snow and saw some antelope bunched up being all kinds of alert. When I got to looking there was a lion crouched down watching them. As I disturbed its hunt it took off making long bounds then went into a canyon around half a mile away. Like other cats they move slowly most of the time and I believe that several times callers call them but just don't see them, or they might not stay on stand long enough for them to come to where they could be seen, where did that tan rock come from type of thing. High volume is not your friend when calling cats, with an e-caller mid to low volume with hand calls wearing the brown jersey cloth gloves mutes the sound. Again, they will circle around behind you, often only finding tracks left in snow or dusty ground telling the caller that they were being watched. Study the cats in your neighborhood when their people let them run, they act much the same as bobcats and lions do. Try calling a few of them to see what works on them and take lessons from that to the field with you. I have practiced my calling in all types of settings not only out in the field trying to call the target animal, but just targeting an animal to see how it would react, so I could learn from it. [/QUOTE]
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Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Predator calling
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