Handgunr
New member
Well freebm...
Maybe like the meteorologist's....I got lucky on calling that one...
Hayzer & all...
Recapping this weekend will be easy, it's long, but you asked /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/wink.gif....so here goes......
Wayne was right, it sucked /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/confused1.gif!
Not totally, but for the most part.....and it wasn't based on the weather alone either.
On Sat. morning, weather was rainy and useless for hunting. My partner Dennis and I opted to head to Gander Mtn. to pick up some odd's & ends. We headed back to the north end of our county to catch the afternoon hunt as the rain had turned to snow. Getting down into a gully to hunt the last couple of hours resulted in no takers. Lots of sign, but based on the stormy weather they weren't coming out.
Sunday morning was a little better with partial clearing, but the wind and the temp's were against us...still nothing. We headed up north of us about 25 miles or so to sit a swampy bog area where a lot of fox and a few coyotes hang out. After making a 2hr. setup there and seeing nothing, we headed back south towards Carlton Hill State Lands.
On the way back, astonshingly, we spotted the most beautiful male coyote standing (very majestically /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif) on a hillside 150yds. off the road, surveying the land. He apparently knew where he wanted to go and was checking things out. I pulled my truck over to the shoulder about 100yds. past a blind spot, grabbed my .223, tossed in a round and scrambled for the corner where we saw him. By the time I got back to that spot, he apparently heard the truck stop on the crunchy ice, and instead of coming down the opposite side of the hill he was on, he headed straight down the crest of the hill and took an alternate route to the hedgerow he wanted to cross. Talk about smart !
I could easily see he had moved from the hilltop, so I ran down the blind side of the hill to about the area that he was when we spotted him. By the time I got to the crest of the hill, he was already across the hedge and at least 250-300yds from me. He wasn't running, but trotted. He followed the gullies and rolls in the field and I never got a chance for a clean shot at him. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/mad.gif
Calling never made a difference on him.
Although stumped, I was reinvigorated from that point on for the rest of the day /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif.
Wanting to get permission and stay there, we had already made plans to hunt elsewhere, so we stuck with the original plan.
Heading back to Carlton Hill, we got setup and started calling only to get blown out by bird hunter's and their dogs. Frustrated, but understanding, we pulled up stakes and headed elsewhere on the same state land. Calling hard, we still got no takers...wind was terrible & cold.
The day ended with us in the same gully we were in the day prior, and no takers. Good spot for fox, but oddly, no responses.
Being public lands as well, my partner and I, trying a different approach, setup in sperate areas about 400yds. apart. His spot was fine, but where I was located on a high ridge above a beautiful gully, (very good visibility and layout) has a path that runs through it. And, sure enough, some idiot (with his wife) picks this particular day (freezing & crappy) to go on a nature hike with his wife. Not only does he walk in talking at the top of his lungs, making all kinds of racket, he see's me and waves. I did a half assed wave back, and after he knew I was [beeep], he shrugged and said sorry....kind of like an "oh well".
Well not only did he screw me up once, and instead of going out a different way, at just about the perfect time for game, he and his wife coming tromping back through talking at the top of his lungs AGAIN....I got up and stomped out of there smokin' mad /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/angry-smiley-055.gif.
I grabbed Dennis (partner) and called it a day.
We hunted private property yesterday (MLK day) and it started out very cold (8 degrees) with a slight wind that made it feel much worse. Very clear though....but the area is good for fox, and now, apparently coyotes. We found coyote sign of a big male and smaller female coming into the area, so things looked promising. Nothing in the morning.....making several sets in and around 5 miles of that area, and although calling nothing, we did see other area's where coyotes were showing up more.
We returned to the same location for the evening and still got no takers.
We paid our dues for the weekend, but got bupkiss.....but that's hunting and we understand it.....love it anyway.
Wayne...........good goin....I don't think that coyote is educated just yet...just try a different call next time,or blow the one you used differently, just not the same way. They'll get wise to that quick...especially if they see, or wind you.
Next time, try a decoy.......a lifelike stuffed toy, or a patch of raggedy "mo-hair" material on a stake & a spring with some fishing line to move it, works very, very well.
Glad you're pumped.......... /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif
Hope someone connected /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/confused1.gif....these NY coyotes are tuff critters. Very, very smart.....very much different than the other varieties.
Take care,
Bob
Maybe like the meteorologist's....I got lucky on calling that one...
Hayzer & all...
Recapping this weekend will be easy, it's long, but you asked /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/wink.gif....so here goes......
Wayne was right, it sucked /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/confused1.gif!
Not totally, but for the most part.....and it wasn't based on the weather alone either.
On Sat. morning, weather was rainy and useless for hunting. My partner Dennis and I opted to head to Gander Mtn. to pick up some odd's & ends. We headed back to the north end of our county to catch the afternoon hunt as the rain had turned to snow. Getting down into a gully to hunt the last couple of hours resulted in no takers. Lots of sign, but based on the stormy weather they weren't coming out.
Sunday morning was a little better with partial clearing, but the wind and the temp's were against us...still nothing. We headed up north of us about 25 miles or so to sit a swampy bog area where a lot of fox and a few coyotes hang out. After making a 2hr. setup there and seeing nothing, we headed back south towards Carlton Hill State Lands.
On the way back, astonshingly, we spotted the most beautiful male coyote standing (very majestically /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif) on a hillside 150yds. off the road, surveying the land. He apparently knew where he wanted to go and was checking things out. I pulled my truck over to the shoulder about 100yds. past a blind spot, grabbed my .223, tossed in a round and scrambled for the corner where we saw him. By the time I got back to that spot, he apparently heard the truck stop on the crunchy ice, and instead of coming down the opposite side of the hill he was on, he headed straight down the crest of the hill and took an alternate route to the hedgerow he wanted to cross. Talk about smart !
I could easily see he had moved from the hilltop, so I ran down the blind side of the hill to about the area that he was when we spotted him. By the time I got to the crest of the hill, he was already across the hedge and at least 250-300yds from me. He wasn't running, but trotted. He followed the gullies and rolls in the field and I never got a chance for a clean shot at him. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/mad.gif
Calling never made a difference on him.
Although stumped, I was reinvigorated from that point on for the rest of the day /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif.
Wanting to get permission and stay there, we had already made plans to hunt elsewhere, so we stuck with the original plan.
Heading back to Carlton Hill, we got setup and started calling only to get blown out by bird hunter's and their dogs. Frustrated, but understanding, we pulled up stakes and headed elsewhere on the same state land. Calling hard, we still got no takers...wind was terrible & cold.
The day ended with us in the same gully we were in the day prior, and no takers. Good spot for fox, but oddly, no responses.
Being public lands as well, my partner and I, trying a different approach, setup in sperate areas about 400yds. apart. His spot was fine, but where I was located on a high ridge above a beautiful gully, (very good visibility and layout) has a path that runs through it. And, sure enough, some idiot (with his wife) picks this particular day (freezing & crappy) to go on a nature hike with his wife. Not only does he walk in talking at the top of his lungs, making all kinds of racket, he see's me and waves. I did a half assed wave back, and after he knew I was [beeep], he shrugged and said sorry....kind of like an "oh well".
Well not only did he screw me up once, and instead of going out a different way, at just about the perfect time for game, he and his wife coming tromping back through talking at the top of his lungs AGAIN....I got up and stomped out of there smokin' mad /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/angry-smiley-055.gif.
I grabbed Dennis (partner) and called it a day.
We hunted private property yesterday (MLK day) and it started out very cold (8 degrees) with a slight wind that made it feel much worse. Very clear though....but the area is good for fox, and now, apparently coyotes. We found coyote sign of a big male and smaller female coming into the area, so things looked promising. Nothing in the morning.....making several sets in and around 5 miles of that area, and although calling nothing, we did see other area's where coyotes were showing up more.
We returned to the same location for the evening and still got no takers.
We paid our dues for the weekend, but got bupkiss.....but that's hunting and we understand it.....love it anyway.
Wayne...........good goin....I don't think that coyote is educated just yet...just try a different call next time,or blow the one you used differently, just not the same way. They'll get wise to that quick...especially if they see, or wind you.
Next time, try a decoy.......a lifelike stuffed toy, or a patch of raggedy "mo-hair" material on a stake & a spring with some fishing line to move it, works very, very well.
Glad you're pumped.......... /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif
Hope someone connected /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/confused1.gif....these NY coyotes are tuff critters. Very, very smart.....very much different than the other varieties.
Take care,
Bob