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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: 2747900" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>Here where I live there wasn't a lot of game animals around in the 50's and early 60's . We had gone through the great depression then into WW2, people needed to feed their families with few paying jobs to be had. Then came WW2 and rationing along with the dust bowl having just ended the wildlife took a beating. I was taught how to catch rabbits without shooting them by wiring them out with barbed wire you learned fast what a scared rabbit sounded like and how long they would scream. In the 60's the white-tailed deer started showing up. As I was mowing with a little Farmall tractor and mower I would see the fawns laying in the hay so I would grab them and get them moved out of the way so as not to kill them. It only took a couple of them to figure out that sound and the sound their moms made when looking for the babies. Then came the day I was driving an old 53 Willies jeep and didn't see an antelope fawn in the tall grass of the two-track road, as I got over the top of it, it started to do it's bawling I nearly jumped out of the jeep being startled by it. Another new sound was learned but I also sat and just listened to the antelope and deer in the field talking among themselves. and started figuring out how to imitate them.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 2747900, member: 91783"] Here where I live there wasn't a lot of game animals around in the 50's and early 60's . We had gone through the great depression then into WW2, people needed to feed their families with few paying jobs to be had. Then came WW2 and rationing along with the dust bowl having just ended the wildlife took a beating. I was taught how to catch rabbits without shooting them by wiring them out with barbed wire you learned fast what a scared rabbit sounded like and how long they would scream. In the 60's the white-tailed deer started showing up. As I was mowing with a little Farmall tractor and mower I would see the fawns laying in the hay so I would grab them and get them moved out of the way so as not to kill them. It only took a couple of them to figure out that sound and the sound their moms made when looking for the babies. Then came the day I was driving an old 53 Willies jeep and didn't see an antelope fawn in the tall grass of the two-track road, as I got over the top of it, it started to do it's bawling I nearly jumped out of the jeep being startled by it. Another new sound was learned but I also sat and just listened to the antelope and deer in the field talking among themselves. and started figuring out how to imitate them. [/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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