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Subject: [working-gundog] New .22
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robclayauUser is Offline

JH
JH
Posts:36


08/17/2009 3:42 PM  
With practice my rifle shooting is steadily improving. Shot this lot yesterday afternoon on the way home from work. (http://www.flickr.com/photos/1329619...81631/sizes/o/) Of the 7 rabbits, 5 are head/neck shots, on 2 my aim was a little off and I got them in the upper chest. I also had 2 complete misses. We'll eat the 2 chest shots, the head shots will be dissected by my science class to learn about the circulatory, respiratory and digestive systems. The circulatory and respiratory systems are pretty messed up in a chest shot rabbit. Students can't learn much about the anatomy of these systems on these rabbits, although they could get a lot of respect for a humble .22 projectile.

Cheers,
Rob




stuwestUser is Offline

JH
JH
Posts:39


08/17/2009 3:46 PM  
the assassin's choice in a crowded environment... Stu, Dawn & Hunter West Founder, Pointing Labradors "Letting Labs Point the Way!" Alma Bottom Pointing Labradors N4758 350th Street, Elmwood, WI 54740 (715) 639-3900 h&w StuWest@AlmaBottom.com www.AlmaBottom.com Rob Clay wrote: > With practice my rifle shooting is steadily improving. Shot this lot > yesterday afternoon on the way home from work. > (http://www.flickr.com/photos/1329619...81631/sizes/o/ > ) Of > the 7 rabbits, 5 are head/neck shots, on 2 my aim was a little off and > I got them in the upper chest. I also had 2 complete misses. We'll eat > the 2 chest shots, the head shots will be dissected by my science > class to learn about the circulatory, respiratory and digestive > systems. The circulatory and respiratory systems are pretty messed up > in a chest shot rabbit. Students can't learn much about the anatomy of > these systems on these rabbits, although they could get a lot of > respect for a humble .22 projectile. > > Cheers, > Rob > > > >
rospiganUser is Offline

MH
MH
Posts:372


08/24/2009 2:01 PM  
I came home from work last night, pretty exhausted. Decided that the roe-deer can wait until Wednesday since tomorrow Tuesday I have to make a short trip to the Aland islands. When the sun started to go down this evening I could not resist to take a rifle and go out "just to have a look". There were several females that run into cover when I came out. I sat down in a tower and enjoyed the weather waiting for the sun to set. A female came out on one side of me. Then another very far away - 300 meters or more. At least I thought for a while it was a female. Then came a fox-puppy close to the far away deer. The deer observed the fox for some time and as the fox came closer the deer made a short rush towards the fox. The fox escaped in my direction and after several short rushes the deer was about 220meters from me and the fox-puppy 200 metres. Now I saw that it was not a female but a small buck with a couple of thin " 6 inch nails" above it eyes.
 
I had not had time to test shoot the rifle but decided to take a shot anyway. The deer turned around on the spot in the shot but after a short rush in one direction it turned around again and ran in another. There was a small cloud of steam on the place of the shot but the cloud was very low, just above the grass instead of being a feet or two higher up, that is normal with a lung shot. I saw the deer running at full speed in a healthy way for several hundred of meters before disappearing into cover.
 
I thought that it will be difficult to find it without a dog and a dog I do not have for the moment since Maud and Briz are far away in the mountains!
 
However the fox-puppy had not taken any notice of the gunfire but was chasing mice in tall grass. I saw its ears at around 190 meters ( I know the distances on that field fairly well) and estimated its body's position and fired another round. It fell on the spot.
 
Of course I did not find the deer without a dog, I did not even find the spot it had been on when fired at. No blood or hair or pieces of intestines or muscles.
 
However I am rather sure that I missed it just below and the steam came from the ground where the bullet had hit it. The reason why I hit the fox at about the same distance was possibly because I only saw its ears. I held the sight probably above its back, it hunted with a long neck and high head,  therefore hitting it dead on in the shoulder. Now, back home again, I remember I might have changed the sights for a much shorter distance when Maud was out shooting fox last winter. She had them almost around her boots at times and was hampered by a rifle sighted in at 200 meters.
 
The lesson is that it pays of to test shoot and sight in the rifle every time when you are not entirely sure about how it shoots and with what ammo! It also pays to have a tracking dog around when you go for animals that can run fast and far, even with their heart shot to pieces.
 
 Torsti
Borta Med Vindens Kennel
www.rospigan.net
"If you pick up a starving dog and make him prosperous,
he will not bite you; that is the principal difference
between a dog and a man." /Mark Twain
 
 
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