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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: 2598966" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>It's interesting to me the way that calls have evolved in just a short amount of time . The first calling machine I was exposed to was a battery powered RCA 45 rpm record player with a record made of the government trappers coyote answering some wild coyote . Next came the Philips cassette tape players with mostly homemade cassettes , Soon some enterprising people started making and selling tapes of varying quality's . Burnham Brothers and Johnny Stewart were leaders in the field at that time they both soon started producing cassette callers . I had both of their calling machines and soon found that I liked the Johnny Stewart MS512 best . No it wasn't perfect by any means with all of the cassette players you needed to take the tape out at the end and turn it over or rewind then to start playing them again . The tapes were often reproduced so many times that the sound quality was degraded , they would get loose and then the tape would get eaten . You also needed to clean the heads on the player , change the batteries or recharge then on a regular bases cold weather was not a friend of them at all , hot weather in your truck with the dust and dirt of the field played havoc with the machines and tapes as did the constant vibrations .</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 2598966, member: 91783"] It's interesting to me the way that calls have evolved in just a short amount of time . The first calling machine I was exposed to was a battery powered RCA 45 rpm record player with a record made of the government trappers coyote answering some wild coyote . Next came the Philips cassette tape players with mostly homemade cassettes , Soon some enterprising people started making and selling tapes of varying quality's . Burnham Brothers and Johnny Stewart were leaders in the field at that time they both soon started producing cassette callers . I had both of their calling machines and soon found that I liked the Johnny Stewart MS512 best . No it wasn't perfect by any means with all of the cassette players you needed to take the tape out at the end and turn it over or rewind then to start playing them again . The tapes were often reproduced so many times that the sound quality was degraded , they would get loose and then the tape would get eaten . You also needed to clean the heads on the player , change the batteries or recharge then on a regular bases cold weather was not a friend of them at all , hot weather in your truck with the dust and dirt of the field played havoc with the machines and tapes as did the constant vibrations . [/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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