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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: 2760201" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>Several years ago a friend of mine called me and asked me if I would take another guy and him out calling. I said that I would, so we met the next morning and headed out to his dads place out north of town over 60 miles out. There was close to a foot of powdery snow, and it was below zero in early March. We got out there as it was getting light enough to shoot got set up on a high cut bank overlooking the Chyenne River. I waited several minutes just listening to the world, then let out a lone howl waited several seconds then did a locator call. down the river three coyotes answered me. I replied to them with the same as they said to me and stopped calling. The river being frozen you could hear them walking on it as they started coming to investigate who was in their area. Soon they came around a bend and into sight as they got to about a hundred yards my friend shot the one on the left the other guy shot but missed his mark. two coyotes ran to my right out into the weeds and brush. I got on my howler and did the wounded coyote squalls. they turned and started running back towards the one that was shot. The one would raise up on its hind legs trying to get a view of the lost coyote. I got the one on my side lined up my friend got the one on his side lined up I made our hissing sound that signaled to shoot our shots were nearly at the same millisecond both coyotes fell. When we went down to retrieve them, the first one had been the heavy female, the one that had been standing up on its hind legs was the male and the other one was a young female that wasn't bred. My friend and I had hunted together often and had our signals worked out to the place where we really didn't need to say anything when we were in the stand, a nod, a point or sitttt noise was all that we needed. We got two more that day the new guy didn't ever get one I sighted his rifle in and it couldn't hit anything at first, but I got it to hit pretty consistently.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 2760201, member: 91783"] Several years ago a friend of mine called me and asked me if I would take another guy and him out calling. I said that I would, so we met the next morning and headed out to his dads place out north of town over 60 miles out. There was close to a foot of powdery snow, and it was below zero in early March. We got out there as it was getting light enough to shoot got set up on a high cut bank overlooking the Chyenne River. I waited several minutes just listening to the world, then let out a lone howl waited several seconds then did a locator call. down the river three coyotes answered me. I replied to them with the same as they said to me and stopped calling. The river being frozen you could hear them walking on it as they started coming to investigate who was in their area. Soon they came around a bend and into sight as they got to about a hundred yards my friend shot the one on the left the other guy shot but missed his mark. two coyotes ran to my right out into the weeds and brush. I got on my howler and did the wounded coyote squalls. they turned and started running back towards the one that was shot. The one would raise up on its hind legs trying to get a view of the lost coyote. I got the one on my side lined up my friend got the one on his side lined up I made our hissing sound that signaled to shoot our shots were nearly at the same millisecond both coyotes fell. When we went down to retrieve them, the first one had been the heavy female, the one that had been standing up on its hind legs was the male and the other one was a young female that wasn't bred. My friend and I had hunted together often and had our signals worked out to the place where we really didn't need to say anything when we were in the stand, a nod, a point or sitttt noise was all that we needed. We got two more that day the new guy didn't ever get one I sighted his rifle in and it couldn't hit anything at first, but I got it to hit pretty consistently. [/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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