FEMALE COYOTE DOWN!!
Yesterday evening I settled into the cabin, reattached the NV apparatus and shot one time to check zero. It was right there, just a tad bit high, less than 1/2" at 60 yards.
Around 1:30 AM the sensor went off. I got out of bed and into shooting position, turned on the NV outfit and IR light. It was a possum. The coyote had been visiting during that time most nights, but I suspected a possum by the way the alarm sounded. I watched the possum for maybe a couple of minutes, basically playing around with lights and positioning the crosshair on him, when suddenly he ran fast down the hill. I didn't know a possum could run so fast.
I thought to myself, what the heck! I'll bet that coyote is coming. I waited a few more minutes and nothing, so I returned to bed. I had just got zipped up in the sleeping bag and settled in good when the alarm went off again. This time the alarm acted differently. It was the coyote. I squeezed the trigger at 1:48 AM.
I can generally tell when a coyote is at the site vs a possum. Possums move around slowly and don't ring the alarm as much or often, whereas a coyote is jittery most of the time and moves around a lot. The sensors tend to go off more steadily when a coyote is present.
The Wildgame Innovations Crush 3 trail camera provided IR, but I turned on the 940nm light which really helped. The crush is aiming more toward the cabin, and the 940 light illuminated the side of the coyote that I shot. Illumination was great.
Problem is, I shot just as the camera turned off, so no kill on video. The Bushnell trail camera didn't earn it's keep this time and never got a single coyote video last night. Don't know what's going on with it lately.
At the shot, the coyote almost fell, but tried to stay on it's feet. Basically it was down but trying to stay up. It jumped around three or four times going down hill and fell. That was it.
First photo is a view from the cabin door.
The Eagle Tac light really provided great illumination for me last night, though I didn't use it when I shot the coyote. Just by itself it was great, but was even enhanced more with the aid of the 940nm light. The bullet camera mounted behind the scope ocular could see so well and bright. I was amazed and very pleased with the illumination.
I had the scope set to 8X this time, which caused some loss of field of view. However, on 8X I could see very, very well to place the crosshair just right. Set on 6X to 7X is plenty and actually provides a bit more brightness as well as better field of view.
You can see in the photo where the bullet hit the coyote. There was a patch of blood on the offside, but I searched and searched and could not find an exit at all. When I pressed on the coyote's ribs, I could hear mush inside, and also felt something hard just under the skin, more like bone. I'm thinking a bone or something just barely made a pin hole in the offside and caused some drops of blood to ooze out. That coyote went to pieces inside from the little Hornady 25 gr. HP out of the CZ .17 Remington.
This coyote makes number 8 taken from the cabin / bait site area with night vision, the last two of which were with the home-made version.
The Bushnell scope with it's parallax adjustment seems to have solved the POI issue that I had earlier with the other scope. However, seems I continue to have problems sighting the scope in via the LCD monitor. Once sighted, it appears (at least for now) to be holding zero and POI fairly well. Aiming is not quite as precise as looking through a traditional daytime scope, but it's plenty close enough for reasonable distances.
I was disappointed that I didn't get the shot on video, but I plan to remedy that. I plan to get a small DVR that will hook into the bullet camera and will record what is seen through the scope.
My thoughts about the home-made night vision took a turn for the better last night. I think I can now recommend it to anyone who might be interested in the same. It's cheap to put together and it works much better than my Gen 1 scope. It does need illumination, however, but with that I would venture a guess that it's as good as a Gen 2. Just guessing since I've never looked through a Gen 2.