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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: 2139610" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>As a kid I was taken from Wyoming to Southern Indiana the grass's and all things grow taller there you have a lot of timber where I was there and un-till you get used to it it's claustrophobic for most people from the open country of here . Here we have a lot of open areas with short grass's some well watered areas will have bushes and sparse trees . in some areas we have buck brush , sage brush and trees that are pine , aspen or cotton wood . Along creeks or rivers we have differing types of trees box elder , willow and buffalo berry , juniper grow in the acidic soils that don't get as much moisture but normally in draws where snow will collect . So any way we get to see things here out at distances where in a lot of places you wouldn't , we do have places with draws and stuff that you can't . But having spent time back east in the brush and timber I learned to sit and look into the timber and brush or grown up fields and find the animals that already knew I was there and were just frozen watching me . Their eyes starring or their ears moving to hear better and in different directions with cats it's a non stop movement of the tail like some peoples feet when they set . Here I've watched them lay to observe you for up to an hour . You can start out looking things over to see what is there and after a while you will see some thing that just showed up and is just a little bit out of place but doesn't pop out . Maybe it's a fox, cat , coyote , deer or antelope just watching your way but it's there now and wasn't before . Even in the stuff back east you will learn to see them if you take the time to observe the world around you it doesn't just happen for most people , unless you grew up doing it , you have to be patient teach your self to observe not just look see the small details , get that feeling of something changed what was it . The world we live in isn't the same world that they live in we have taught ourselves to ignore sounds , sights and smells that mean something and so have to relearn to use them again . It took years to get this way and it doesn't come back in just one or two days . You can start with small animals close to home , rabbits , birds , squirrels ect. just by watching for small movements on the ground , in the trees or any place that may or may not be grown up , by setting on your porch just being observant as you would if you were working in a factory or as any worker in a dangerous setting . The key is to learn to turn it on when needed and off when not .</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 2139610, member: 91783"] As a kid I was taken from Wyoming to Southern Indiana the grass's and all things grow taller there you have a lot of timber where I was there and un-till you get used to it it's claustrophobic for most people from the open country of here . Here we have a lot of open areas with short grass's some well watered areas will have bushes and sparse trees . in some areas we have buck brush , sage brush and trees that are pine , aspen or cotton wood . Along creeks or rivers we have differing types of trees box elder , willow and buffalo berry , juniper grow in the acidic soils that don't get as much moisture but normally in draws where snow will collect . So any way we get to see things here out at distances where in a lot of places you wouldn't , we do have places with draws and stuff that you can't . But having spent time back east in the brush and timber I learned to sit and look into the timber and brush or grown up fields and find the animals that already knew I was there and were just frozen watching me . Their eyes starring or their ears moving to hear better and in different directions with cats it's a non stop movement of the tail like some peoples feet when they set . Here I've watched them lay to observe you for up to an hour . You can start out looking things over to see what is there and after a while you will see some thing that just showed up and is just a little bit out of place but doesn't pop out . Maybe it's a fox, cat , coyote , deer or antelope just watching your way but it's there now and wasn't before . Even in the stuff back east you will learn to see them if you take the time to observe the world around you it doesn't just happen for most people , unless you grew up doing it , you have to be patient teach your self to observe not just look see the small details , get that feeling of something changed what was it . The world we live in isn't the same world that they live in we have taught ourselves to ignore sounds , sights and smells that mean something and so have to relearn to use them again . It took years to get this way and it doesn't come back in just one or two days . You can start with small animals close to home , rabbits , birds , squirrels ect. just by watching for small movements on the ground , in the trees or any place that may or may not be grown up , by setting on your porch just being observant as you would if you were working in a factory or as any worker in a dangerous setting . The key is to learn to turn it on when needed and off when not . [/QUOTE]
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Ramblings and Such From Hunting Coyote
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