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Hunting
Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Ramblings and Such From Hunting Coyote
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<blockquote data-quote="DSheetz" data-source="post: 1987086" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>Scotty was my fur buyer that I used you could trust him to give you the best price he could and he would take the time to tell you what wasn't right and what was right with your fur . He and Merlin , another fur buyer , taught me a lot about handling fur as well as the grading of them . Scotty also guided big game hunters for his brother in law on one of the ranches I did control work for so in the fall he and I would get together and visit about where I had been seeing good quality animals for the clients they had . Scotty would stay in a log home at the bottom of a long grade that rose over a thousand feet in less then a half mile climb of the road . This home was built in the 1800's and still had a packed dirt floor with only two rooms it was heated by the wood cook stove . The clients stayed in campers set up for them . One morning I stopped in for coffee and a chat with Scotty he told me you've got to see this guy to believe him . I was introduced to a guy in drees loafers , suit pants and shirt less the tie with a down filled dark blue vest on top of it . He had a custom English rifle with a scope made in Sweden mounted on it . He told me that he ordered the ammo from the rifle builder when he needed it as they built it for his rifle chamber and kept dies set up for his rifle with the loading his rifle shot to their liking . He was a Goldsteene from the fur garment district in NYC . He was the fur buyer that bought all of Scotty's fur . Scotty ask me if I knew where there might be a special mule deer buck for him . I had been seeing one that looked like he had a small aspen bush on it's head . It would just lay there in a small draw by an aspen patch with just his antlers sticking out . I told him to go up the road and into the Verdin pasture take the road up till it crossed the creek then take the right hand trail up Verdin draw on the back side of Verdin grade . I went on up and checked my coyote sets .A couple 3 hours latter I came back by there hanging was the buck . I'm sure that if you were going to eat it that it would be tough and strong tasting . The antlers had a lot of small points sticking out and was five on each side a real non typical . I'm not cut out to guide hunters I like to be quiet , walk softly and observe the world around me when I hunt I don't look for antlers to mount they don't taste good to me . But each to their own if your good to me I'll do you the same .</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 1987086, member: 91783"] Scotty was my fur buyer that I used you could trust him to give you the best price he could and he would take the time to tell you what wasn't right and what was right with your fur . He and Merlin , another fur buyer , taught me a lot about handling fur as well as the grading of them . Scotty also guided big game hunters for his brother in law on one of the ranches I did control work for so in the fall he and I would get together and visit about where I had been seeing good quality animals for the clients they had . Scotty would stay in a log home at the bottom of a long grade that rose over a thousand feet in less then a half mile climb of the road . This home was built in the 1800's and still had a packed dirt floor with only two rooms it was heated by the wood cook stove . The clients stayed in campers set up for them . One morning I stopped in for coffee and a chat with Scotty he told me you've got to see this guy to believe him . I was introduced to a guy in drees loafers , suit pants and shirt less the tie with a down filled dark blue vest on top of it . He had a custom English rifle with a scope made in Sweden mounted on it . He told me that he ordered the ammo from the rifle builder when he needed it as they built it for his rifle chamber and kept dies set up for his rifle with the loading his rifle shot to their liking . He was a Goldsteene from the fur garment district in NYC . He was the fur buyer that bought all of Scotty's fur . Scotty ask me if I knew where there might be a special mule deer buck for him . I had been seeing one that looked like he had a small aspen bush on it's head . It would just lay there in a small draw by an aspen patch with just his antlers sticking out . I told him to go up the road and into the Verdin pasture take the road up till it crossed the creek then take the right hand trail up Verdin draw on the back side of Verdin grade . I went on up and checked my coyote sets .A couple 3 hours latter I came back by there hanging was the buck . I'm sure that if you were going to eat it that it would be tough and strong tasting . The antlers had a lot of small points sticking out and was five on each side a real non typical . I'm not cut out to guide hunters I like to be quiet , walk softly and observe the world around me when I hunt I don't look for antlers to mount they don't taste good to me . But each to their own if your good to me I'll do you the same . [/QUOTE]
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Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Ramblings and Such From Hunting Coyote
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