Monday night I dropped a 3-legged coyote with my home-made night vision outfit. I had been watching (via trail camera) this coyote for quite some time, close to two years probably. It would visit the bait site, get a mouthful and then be gone for who knows how long, sometimes months. That made it very difficult to hunt since I couldn't pattern it, and for me to know when to stay at the cabin. Last night it all came together.
The coyote visited around 3:00 AM, setting off the alarm. In normal fashion, it was very skittish. I first deployed a 940nm spotlight that helped me to see what was at the bait, but when I turned on the 850nm torch, the coyote stopped and looked my way. It could see the red glow, and acted as if it were going to leave. I didn't waste time in taking a shot since I have been after this one for a while. Other coyotes see the red glow but don't seem alarmed by it, but this skinny female was different and has always been very nervy at the bait site.
Actually I have stayed at the cabin for three consecutive nights. The first night a different coyote visited. I only took video of this one and didn't want to shoot it this time of year. Just a personal thing.
As is the norm, the .17 Remington (CZ 527) shooting 25 gr. Hornady HPs dropped it on the spot. Distance was 60 yards. I think this is the smallest coyote I have ever taken. Could be its handicap prevented it from eating well.
Here's a few photos of the inside of my hobo-shack of a cabin that acts as my hunting blind.
Here is a link to a video I did three nights ago of a coyote when viewed through the home-made NV outfit.
For those of you who are impatient and want to sit on edge, waiting for me to take a shot, well, just relax
and enjoy the scenery. LOL. The kill shot on Tripod comes near the end, as well as a previous coyote kill
I made at the same place. The two kills demonstrate how the home-made unit works with regards to
white-out when the shot is taken.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xlEJAmSk_E&feature=youtu.be