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Author Topic: Seriously though......
csmithers
unknown comic


Icon 1 posted August 01, 2007 05:52 PM            Edit/Delete Post 
Why is that, atleast to me, it seems that predator hunting attracts the most down to earth approachable people? Out of all of the shooting sports, hunting etc. it is the predator guys that you find online, in forums and they even answer their own e-mails. You can contact them with questions and they are the ones most forthcoming with advice without a price.
[Big Grin] Predator hunters are a breed apart. [Big Grin]

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Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted August 01, 2007 06:04 PM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
I have long felt they (predator hunters) are the most knowledgeable segment of the hunting fraternity, seem to be familiar with all other forms of hunting, best shooters, best woodsmen, highly successful, and approachable, and shares information for the asking.

In short, PAKMANS! PAMPASS KNOW IT ALLS RULE!

Good hunting. LB

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EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 32368 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
canine
Knows what it's all about
Member # 687

Icon 1 posted August 01, 2007 06:50 PM      Profile for canine   Email canine         Edit/Delete Post 
F... You Smithers [Eek!] [Big Grin] [Razz]

I agree, I love the challenge and dedication involved with predator hunting. It takes the most skilled and tuned woodmanship to kill predators consistantly. Unless your from Texas.... [Big Grin] Take it easy on me Ronnie [Wink]

I get a kick outta the hardcore deer hunters around here, lyin and secrets about where the big bucks are hiding, then beggin to be shown how to call in coyotes [Roll Eyes]

That's why I am a predator caller,I love the challenge [Smile]

JD

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Hunting The East "back to Basic's" Part 1

Posts: 162 | From: ohio | Registered: Jul 2005  |  IP: Logged
Cdog911
"There are some ideas so absurd only an intellectual could believe them."--George Orwell.
Member # 7

Icon 1 posted August 01, 2007 07:40 PM      Profile for Cdog911   Author's Homepage   Email Cdog911         Edit/Delete Post 
Whose giving away secrets for free?!?! [Mad] [Mad] [Mad]

Most deer hunters are happy to get one animal within three hundred yards a year. Damned underchievers. Had one ask me once why I hunt coyotes and not deer anymore, I told him, "Because my prey hunts your prey down and kills it. Any questions?"

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I am only one. But still, I am one. I cannot do everything, but still, I can do something; and, because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do something that I can do.

Posts: 5440 | From: The gun-lovin', gun-friendly wild, wild west | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
RoyalOaksTaxidermy
Knows what it's all about
Member # 1532

Icon 1 posted August 01, 2007 09:24 PM      Profile for RoyalOaksTaxidermy   Author's Homepage   Email RoyalOaksTaxidermy         Edit/Delete Post 
I have to agree... Most predator hunters are quite nice to chat with.. Some will even drag you along to their hot spot or tell you how to get there. And its a dang good thing we are nice people.. cuz there are ALOT of people out there who are soooo negative LOL...

And CDOG- I cant imagine giving up deer for coyotes.. We hunt deer in several states and I wouldnt trade deer/elk hunting for nothing in the world LOL.. Way I see it I can enjoy both sides of your coin.. I hunt the prey and the predator.

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Royal Oaks Taxidermy
AKA CoyoteHuntress

Posts: 12 | From: Valley Springs, California | Registered: Jul 2007  |  IP: Logged
RMiller
Knows what it's all about
Member # 1530

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 08:29 AM      Profile for RMiller           Edit/Delete Post 
Good on ya!!!!!
Posts: 15 | From: az | Registered: Jul 2007  |  IP: Logged
csmithers
unknown comic


Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 08:37 AM            Edit/Delete Post 
Canine, there are exceptions to every rule. [Razz]

I am not too far away from you and KeeKee. I could sneak down in the dead of night and 'Scorched Earth' your hunting areas for years to come. [Smile]
Call them in, give them some treats, maybe have them roll over and scratch their bellies. [Big Grin]

[ August 02, 2007, 08:38 AM: Message edited by: smithers ]

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Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 08:45 AM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
quote:
I have long felt they (predator hunters) are the most knowledgeable segment of the hunting fraternity/LB
Of course, there will always be exceptions. Smithers.

Good hunting. LB

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EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 32368 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
Krustyklimber
prefers the bunny hugger pronunciation: ky o tee
Member # 72

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 10:19 AM      Profile for Krustyklimber   Email Krustyklimber         Edit/Delete Post 
I disagree with you guys about the approachability, and the shared knowledge, at least at my "local" level, but I discussed this another thread, recently (and it doesn't need a rehash).

Reading too much conflicting information from the internet (and print), without the ability to sort out what will apply to the area you are in, can make things worse.

Good hunters are good at hunting, almost no matter what they are hunting for, and those who are not are not.

I am proof of that. And so is our new friend Otto. [Wink]

JD,

If it was about "a challenge" you guys would come out here and hunt.

Lance,

I gave up coyotes for deer, and it sucks.

Six and a half minutes of deer hunting, got me buckzilla... vs six and a half years without killing a single predator.
Now, I have to sit around for a year, before I can hunt again? [Roll Eyes]
Phooey!

Deer are stupid. Or at least stupider than me.

Predators are smarter.

LB,

Isn't it successful predator hunters that are the more knowledgeable, among hunters?

It's rare that I sit by a campfire and feel like one of the "more knowledgeable hunters" in the group... unless I am alone. [Razz]

Krusty  -

P.S. Smithers,

I do understand your enthusiasm, that's the same way I feel about trappers.

[ August 02, 2007, 10:45 AM: Message edited by: Krustyklimber ]

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Think about how stupid the average person is, then realize that half of them are stupider than that!

Posts: 1912 | From: Deep in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
canine
Knows what it's all about
Member # 687

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 11:38 AM      Profile for canine   Email canine         Edit/Delete Post 
Smithers, If you could come down and get them to do all that. Damn sure don't do it at night, let us know and we'll film it. [Big Grin]

That sounds like a good idea anyhow, plan a weekend trip this year and come on down and go hunting with us, I am only 2 hours south of the Michigan border. Just leave your blue and yellow clothes at home [Razz] Welcome anytime.

Krusty,
If I had the money to fly out there and kill a coyote I would. Them pictures you posted a while back looked to me like some good callin country. Were rather big on shotgunnin coyotes ever since that deadcoyote load came out.
You kinda posted how I feel about deer hunting also. Too easy! Turkey hunting is fun though, but they aren't smart. Wether they are henned up or not will make or break a season. The closest thing I could compare to coyote callin would be cow callin in a big bull elk.

JD

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Hunting The East "back to Basic's" Part 1

Posts: 162 | From: ohio | Registered: Jul 2005  |  IP: Logged
DanS
Scorched Earth (AZ Sector)
Member # 316

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 01:59 PM      Profile for DanS           Edit/Delete Post 
Good grief Krusty,
6 1/2 years without being able to call in and kill a coyote. I'm not trying to tell you what to do, but if it were me, I think I would treck down to AZ, get a really big cooler full of beer or something and look up one of those AZ posters. If that didn't work, I'd sell the coyote equipment take up fishing, or something different.

I'm just a novice, but I really enjoyed my hunts in AZ. Much better coyoting than where I normally hunt.

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futuaris nisi irrisus ridebis

Saepe Expertus, Semper Fidelis, Fratres Aeterni:
Often Tested, Always Faithful. Brothers Forever!

Posts: 1482 | From: flyover country | Registered: Feb 2004  |  IP: Logged
Rich
2,000th post PAKMAN
Member # 112

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 01:59 PM      Profile for Rich   Author's Homepage   Email Rich         Edit/Delete Post 
Deer hunting is indeed too easy IF we are talking about shooting them with rifles. Take up the bow and arrow and we are in a whole different ball park. It takes a good hunter to be successful every year with the old stick and string. I gave it up a long time ago because calling coyotes is even MORE of a challenge. [Cool]

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If you call the coyotes in close, you won't NEED a high dollar range finder.

Posts: 2854 | From: Iowa | Registered: Feb 2003  |  IP: Logged
Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 02:13 PM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
Now, sure as shit, I make this statement and some nimrod is going to wade in with a contrary opinion. BUT.

I think it's rediculous to consider hunting mule deer in the Sierra Nevada's with archery equipment. For the vast majority.

Great sport for Pennsylvania, sitting in a tree stand, bored to death.

Good hunting. LB

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EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 32368 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
furhvstr
Knows what it's all about
Member # 1389

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 03:18 PM      Profile for furhvstr   Email furhvstr         Edit/Delete Post 
From the desk of Nimrod Pakman-
Not rediculous to chase deer in the Sierras. At least on the east side which is the side I am familiar with. Plenty of guys intimate with the herds spot and stalk bucks every year. Killed a nice 3 point that way several years ago. Rediculous is bowhunting d-17, 100 degree temps and no deer.
What I think is absolutly rediculous is these guys hunting coyotes around here in 105 plus temps in the summertime. Makes no sense to me at all. Just dont see how that could be fun at all.
Skinning or not varmint hunting is a cold wintertime activity to me.
Calling scrawnny hairless pup of it's mama in August sure don't seem like it would be too rewarding to me.
My opinion of course, respectfully submitted.

[ August 02, 2007, 03:19 PM: Message edited by: furhvstr ]

Posts: 144 | From: California | Registered: Apr 2007  |  IP: Logged
furhvstr
Knows what it's all about
Member # 1389

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 03:36 PM      Profile for furhvstr   Email furhvstr         Edit/Delete Post 
On the subject of predator hunters in general I think they become more obsessed with their craft than a lot of other hunters. I think it has to do with their most common prey (the coyote) being such a challenging and complex species. Similar to guys that focus on big deer and trophy elk. They tend to distance themselves from the crowd. We love to talk about our craft but I have never met any successful hunters very loose lipped about their hunting grounds.
Personaly big game hunting has become such a rich mans sport, at least for a Ca. boy, if I am gonna take time off work I sure aint gonna spend a couple grand on tags, gas, lodging and such to pull the trigger once or twice. I can spend the same time away and MAKE MONEY hunting and trapping and get to harvest dozens of animals each year.

Posts: 144 | From: California | Registered: Apr 2007  |  IP: Logged
Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 03:56 PM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
I was refering to the eastern Sierra, Mercer. Places I know, you cannot spot and stalk mule deer very successfully al all, (Bill Murray voice: you crazy nimrod you!)

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EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 32368 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
csmithers
unknown comic


Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 05:10 PM            Edit/Delete Post 
Take up the bow and arrow and we are in a whole different ball park. It takes a good hunter to be successful every year with the old stick and string.

This is very true, Mr. Cronk. Getting a mature buck with a bow is darn near an impossible feat in many states.
I still go out for deer 3-4 times a year for the hell of it and try calling them in during the rut. Getting a nice buck to run your way coming in to a call is one of the biggest thrills you'll ever get. They do some damn crazy things when it's time to shake the sheets.
Edited to add:
Canine, I may just take you up on that offer. But I will be wearing a full U of M football uniform the entire time. [Smile]

[ August 02, 2007, 05:12 PM: Message edited by: smithers ]

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Cdog911
"There are some ideas so absurd only an intellectual could believe them."--George Orwell.
Member # 7

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 07:03 PM      Profile for Cdog911   Author's Homepage   Email Cdog911         Edit/Delete Post 
I bow hunted for several years after rifle hunting became too easy. Took six deer in six years, one of which was a mature doe at less than eight yards as she walked by with her two nearly full grown fawns. She was on big time guard and I consider her to be one of the wariest trophy deer I ever took. As far as bucks, every one I killed was average for that period of time in KS, but by today's standards, not so much.

Now, as far as being able to stalk hunt mulies in western terrain, I have a story (yes, I'm gonna tell another story) that can be told now because the statute of limitations has come and gone. LOL

In '92, I went to my uncle's in Cortez, CO, to hunt mule deer during their third season. My uncle and his brothers own a canyon right above Yellow Jacket Canyon and six miles due north of the back side of Mesa Verde. It had been an unseasonably warm fall thus far (this was Halloween weekend) and he told me to take any buck I saw because I might not get another chance. They just weren't moving down yet with no snow up high.

Anyway, they have a meadow right above their canyon that is 385 yards, corner to corner, surveyed. I was sitting in one corner with a .270. A buck appeared walking up the far side to my left. I could see him thru the binos, but not through the scope. When I finally did get him in the crosshairs, he was about ten yards from that far corner. Crap! I shot, he reared up, turned, and disappeared. Three smaller forkies came out of the pinions at the far end and ran towards me, stopping at about 150 yards. As tempting as it was to tag out on one of them, I knew I had to check my hit on the first one.

Now, I'd been bowhunting whitetails for about five years by now, and calling coyotes since I was about 8, so I'd asked my uncle what the chances were that I could stalk/ still hunt my mulie, and he said he didn't know anyone that could pull it off consistently.

As I moved to work my way around the meadow just inside the cover of the surrounding pinions, I doffed the orange gear and donned my hood, camo gloves and made the last hundred yards on my belly in full camo, contrary to CO law at the time. When I got clear to the north end, I looked at where the back had been standing and there was nothing. I heard something move on the other side of a pinion bush and I slowly pushed a couple branches away and there stood my buck on the other side, bloody side and all. I slipped the rifle through the bush, shot him in the shoulder, he went about fifty yards and piled up.

My uncle came up from the bottom of the canyon to see what was going on and, by then, I already had him tagged and gutted. he asked me about those two shots. I told him where the buck was standing at first and he said he'd estimate that as a good 375 yards. I then took him to where the scuff marks in the baked ground showed he'd been standing when I took the second shot. Then, I walked him around that bush to where one of my gloves lay from when I laid there to take the shot. He paced it off with his mouth hanging open. 11 yards. He admitted that he'd never seen anyone crawl that close to a mulie before. I had to tell him that mulies got nothing on whitetails when it comes to wariness, IMO, but my experience is limited. he still tells me that was a helluva long shot, and an even better stalk shot that day. I have to credit my predator hunting experience for being able to make that crawl and stay hidden.

Okay, that's all. I'm done rambling for tonight. Just my .02.

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I am only one. But still, I am one. I cannot do everything, but still, I can do something; and, because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do something that I can do.

Posts: 5440 | From: The gun-lovin', gun-friendly wild, wild west | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 07:19 PM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
Lance! Byron found your password!

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EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 32368 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
Tim Behle
Administrator MacNeal Sector
Member # 209

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 07:30 PM      Profile for Tim Behle   Author's Homepage   Email Tim Behle         Edit/Delete Post 
quote:
made the last hundred yards on my belly in full camo
Knowing your physical dimensions, that deer probably thought you were just a big turtle.

Lucky you didn't get tipped over on your back!

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Personally, I carry a gun because I'm too young to die and too old to take
an ass kickin'.

Posts: 3160 | From: Five Miles East of Vic, AZ | Registered: Jun 2003  |  IP: Logged
Kelly Jackson
SECOND PLACE/GARTH BROOKS LOOK-A-LIKE CONTEST
Member # 977

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 07:34 PM      Profile for Kelly Jackson   Email Kelly Jackson         Edit/Delete Post 
hahahhahahah = Tim that was good.
Posts: 997 | From: Comanche OK | Registered: Oct 2006  |  IP: Logged
Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted August 02, 2007 08:24 PM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
hahahhahahah = Tim that was good.

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EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 32368 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
Rich Higgins
unknown comic


Icon 1 posted August 03, 2007 06:56 AM            Edit/Delete Post 
Sorry Lance,.... but that was good.
[Big Grin] [Big Grin]

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tlbradford
Rimfires are MAGIC on COYOTES! If you do your part
Member # 1232

Icon 1 posted August 03, 2007 08:43 AM      Profile for tlbradford   Email tlbradford         Edit/Delete Post 
I think a little coffee came out my nose.

Seriously though, you can get pretty close to mule deer in wide open space by crouching down and "doing the Higgin's shuffle". The only difference is you need to walk directly at the deer, no horizontal movement, and move when they are looking away or have their head down. Muleys are pretty curious animals. Of course you may get close to them this way, but would not have any chance to draw a bow. To do that you need to get close totally undetected.

[ August 03, 2007, 08:44 AM: Message edited by: tlbradford ]

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"Dan Carey ain't that special" - LB

Posts: 423 | From: Spokane Valley, WA | Registered: Mar 2007  |  IP: Logged
Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted August 03, 2007 09:06 AM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
I think we need Mercer (furharvester) in here to tell us how to do it?

Of course, bow season, the bucks aren't spooked by rifle shots and there are far fewer nimrods in the woods. It's probably way easier than I imagined?

Good hunting. LB

PS I can't tell if Tim means that Lance has one of those rump roast, corn fed Kansas butts, or he means after being tiped over on his back, he is referencing Lance's "coyote hunter" belly? It seems to be a common affliction among predator hunters, with no provable link to beer drinking?

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EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 32368 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged


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