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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: 2527097" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>I am watching the national weather and once again the moisture is building to the east of N.M. . I sure hope we don't have to get a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico to push moisture into New Mexico . That's what we used to get our fall rains here from causing upslope winds and thus the moisture to drop out of the clouds as they tried to pass over the Rockies . The ocean currents and temperatures will let us know when the drought breaks . Back in the 60's and early 70's the military was playing with the weather in southeast Asia trying to get heavy rains to close road systems from the north to the south . Tons of dry ice and silver nitrates in fine particles were dumped above the clouds . Every day at 2:00 P.M. it would start to rain sometimes so hard you couldn't see your hand in front of your face but that was just the monsoon season for you . I still keep a coat and change of clothes in my truck we get cold rains here at our altitude nothing like a cold shower to get you stirred and heading to the truck and make you keep an eye to the sky . I was out after some pups that were half grown in the rocky rough draws of the pine ridges one day got about 2 miles from the truck on foot when a thunder storm blew in fast dumped so much rain in a few minutes we had a flash flood situation . So I'm setting under a rock out crop still getting wet and hoping not to get struck by all the lightening popping around me then ended up waiting for the water to slow down in the draws so I can get back to my truck all because the chopper got the adults but the pups scattered on them and I got the call to clean them up so they would stop killing lambs . Yes I loved the challenge of it . Even shivering in the rain and seeing the lightening hitting close nearly deafening you was a good adventure that you would have to be there to believe and one you will never forget . Then as fast as it clouded up and dumped on you it blows over and the sun comes out the animals start moving the birds singing you slip and slid in the mud with the gumbo building on your boots , but the sun feels so good and the world smells so fresh and new the birds songs have a new meaning to them , how could you not admire and love it , if you weren't doing what you do you would never get to have that kind of experience and if not told of it by someone that got to experience it you wouldn't know that it had happened . By the next afternoon the only sign of it happening is the washed draws piles of grass , weeds and tree limbs piled at the high water marks . Those are the times that made it all worth it for me to be there doing control work plus the countless other experiences that I would have missed out on had I not been there doing what I loved so much because of those types of experiences .</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 2527097, member: 91783"] I am watching the national weather and once again the moisture is building to the east of N.M. . I sure hope we don't have to get a hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico to push moisture into New Mexico . That's what we used to get our fall rains here from causing upslope winds and thus the moisture to drop out of the clouds as they tried to pass over the Rockies . The ocean currents and temperatures will let us know when the drought breaks . Back in the 60's and early 70's the military was playing with the weather in southeast Asia trying to get heavy rains to close road systems from the north to the south . Tons of dry ice and silver nitrates in fine particles were dumped above the clouds . Every day at 2:00 P.M. it would start to rain sometimes so hard you couldn't see your hand in front of your face but that was just the monsoon season for you . I still keep a coat and change of clothes in my truck we get cold rains here at our altitude nothing like a cold shower to get you stirred and heading to the truck and make you keep an eye to the sky . I was out after some pups that were half grown in the rocky rough draws of the pine ridges one day got about 2 miles from the truck on foot when a thunder storm blew in fast dumped so much rain in a few minutes we had a flash flood situation . So I'm setting under a rock out crop still getting wet and hoping not to get struck by all the lightening popping around me then ended up waiting for the water to slow down in the draws so I can get back to my truck all because the chopper got the adults but the pups scattered on them and I got the call to clean them up so they would stop killing lambs . Yes I loved the challenge of it . Even shivering in the rain and seeing the lightening hitting close nearly deafening you was a good adventure that you would have to be there to believe and one you will never forget . Then as fast as it clouded up and dumped on you it blows over and the sun comes out the animals start moving the birds singing you slip and slid in the mud with the gumbo building on your boots , but the sun feels so good and the world smells so fresh and new the birds songs have a new meaning to them , how could you not admire and love it , if you weren't doing what you do you would never get to have that kind of experience and if not told of it by someone that got to experience it you wouldn't know that it had happened . By the next afternoon the only sign of it happening is the washed draws piles of grass , weeds and tree limbs piled at the high water marks . Those are the times that made it all worth it for me to be there doing control work plus the countless other experiences that I would have missed out on had I not been there doing what I loved so much because of those types of experiences . [/QUOTE]
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