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View Full Version : One Last ADC Hunt for Silverfox_in_ND--5-13-2008--Pictures


Silverfox_in_ND
05-14-2008, 05:11 PM
I headed out around 5:45 p.m., May 13, 2008. I had about 23 miles to go. I stopped at the ranch house, but no one was home, so I headed south of the buildings in my pickup. The wind was coming out of southeast. I found a spot to park my pickup behind a hill close to my first calling stand. I hiked up to the SSW to the edge of a dry creek bed where I set my rifle and gear down. I took the FX5 out of my backpack and started down the creek bank to set the caller up in a tree in the creek bottom. About halfway down the bank I realized I had forgotten to take the remote out of the backpack, so back up the hill I went to fetch the remote. I finally got the caller set up in the crotch of a tree, got back to my rifle, and settled in for some calling. There were lots of cattle off to the northwest, west, and southwest of my stand. I’d have to be real careful if coyotes came in and cattle were in the background. I used just the Lightening Jack sound on this stand instead of both prey sounds and howling. I wanted to save the howling for the next stand where there was a big coulee to the west and lots of coulees off over the hills to the south and southwest. No coyotes came in during my 20 minutes on that stand, so I walked across the creek bottom heading to the southwest.

There were cow-calf pairs and lots of yearlings all over the pasture as I walked to my next stand. There was a big stock dam just to the west of where I crossed the creek. When I got up to where I could see into the dam, there didn’t look to be more than a hundred gallons of water in the bottom. It is really dry around this part of the U.S.

I kept heading to the SW of the dam and found what looked like a good spot to set up. There was good visibility to the ESE and all the way around to the north. I set the FX5 up on my homemade tripod and got back about 50 yards to the NE of the e-caller. Before I could even start the call the cattle were milling around and giving me the eye. When I started out with the female invitation howls, the cattle started heading towards my FX5!!! About 15 head of cattle got to about 30 feet from the FX5 and stood sniffing and snorting and bellowing!!! Some of them were pawing up dirt and had their heads down like they were ready to charge the caller!!! I switched to some cougar growling sounds to see if they would back off, but they weren’t budging. I spent about 50 minutes on this stand and was constantly worrying about whether my FX5 would get stomped into the ground or not. There was a constant parade of cattle coming from every direction to check out the sounds from the FX5 during the whole time I was on stand!!! I got no takers other than about 75 head of cattle!!

I packed up and headed back to the pickup. I drove to the east southeast and up a little hill and stopped the pickup and got out and took a walk to the south so I didn’t expose the pickup to the land to the south. I could see a large valley stretching out to the south so I decided to try calling one more time before it got dark. It was about 8:30 p.m. I could feel a chill in the air as the sun went behind some clouds.

I decided to leave the FX5 in the pickup and just use mouth calls because it takes extra time to set up the tripod and get the FX5 set up. I had good view to the east, southeast, south and southwest and it was about 8:45 p.m. by the time I started calling. I used my SlyDog “Clasic” II deer antler call. This call is voiced with a cottontail reed and has been effective for me in the past. I used that call for the first 5 minutes, using a calling sequence where I call for about 30 to 45 seconds and then go silent for about 45 seconds and then call again. I went silent for about 3 minutes and then took out a high-pitched coyote howler and did some female invitation howls for the next minute or so. I listened for answering howls for a minute or so and then hit the female invitation sounds again for a minute. Still no answering howls. I took out my Bill Austin Howler and did some male challenge howls and mixed in some wounded coyote sounds with the high-pitched howler and then used the SlyDog “Clasic” II call for some rabbit sounds. I wanted the local coyotes to think invading coyotes had captured a rabbit and were fighting over it. At the 14 minute mark, I could hear several coyotes howling back at me from east of my stand. I howled back, trying to imitate some of the howls they were making. I went silent for a few minutes and then used the rabbit call again for a couple minutes.

I checked my watch and I had been on stand for almost 20 minutes. Still no coyotes showing up. Maybe they were circling to the north of me. They could stay out of sight until they caught my scent and be gone without me ever seeing them. I used the high-pitched howler again for some more female howls, but this time I cupped my hand so the sound was aimed to the south, hoping to make the coyotes think this female was south of where I was set up. At about the 24 minute mark I finally spotted a coyote coming over the hill to the east and then a second coyote came into view. My old heart started to beat a little faster, but then I took a few deep breaths and got the initial rush of excitement settled down so the heart beat rate went back to normal. One of the coyotes was a real light color and the other was very dark. They were probably 500 yards away when they first topped the hill. They moved in a WSW direction and were coming along the opposite side of the little valley in front of me on the side of the hill to the SE of my position. The direction they were headed would eventually take them way south of my stand, and they were taking their time. They would move about 25 yards and stop to look and listen, move another 25 yards and stop to look and listen again. I imagine they were looking for the other coyote or coyotes that had invaded their territory.

They got to a saddle about 250 yards SE of my location and stopped. I slipped the safety off on the Savage 12VLP in .204 Ruger. I turned the power ring up to about 12x hoping I’d get a standing shot of about 100 to 150 yards. However, if they kept going southwest, they would be out of my line of sight in just a few steps, so I decided to see if I could change their path and get them coming more towards my hiding spot. I lip squeaked a couple times. Both coyotes homed in on my squeaks and the front one started coming right to me like it was on a string. It was coming way too fast for my liking! The other one soon followed the lead coyote, but the back coyote was about 50 yards behind the lead coyote. I reached up and turned the power ring back down to 6.5x in case I couldn’t get them stopped before they hit the end of my gun barrel!!! I’ll be the first to admit that I don’t like shooting at moving coyotes—I have missed more than my fair share of coyotes when they are on the move.

I had the crosshairs on the lead coyote and when that coyote got about 100 yards away I used my voice to bark a couple times. The coyote didn’t stop, but did turn sideways while still moving. After a couple more steps it finally stopped standing broadside to me with its right side in my direction. I had the crosshairs settled in right behind the right front shoulder and squeezed off the shot. CLICK!!! NO SHOT WENT OFF!!! I could see in the scope that when the firing pin hit the primer and made the CLICK that the coyote I was aiming at must have heard the CLICK or got nervous and it started to shy away again. I carefully ejected that shell, trying to make as little noise and movement as possible and chambered another round. Both coyotes were doing a slow trot away from my stand. The back one was headed SE and the lead coyote was headed south. I barked a couple times again and the lead coyote stopped and turned broadside to me again. I had the crosshairs on a spot right behind the right front shoulder again and squeezed the trigger one more time. This time it went BANG—WHAP!!! The coyote went down. I chambered another round and spotted the other coyote just as it disappeared over the hill—no chance for a quick shot! I got on my Bill Austin Howler and did my best imitation of a wounded coyote for the next couple minutes, but that other coyote was not coming back for a look. I checked my watch and I had been on stand for almost 30 minutes.

I decided to drag this coyote back to the pickup where I had left my camera. I stepped off the distance to the dead coyote—125 yards. The bullet entered just behind the right front shoulder and exited the left shoulder area. There was a small entrance wound and a small, bullet-sized exit hole. The 39 gr. Sierra worked great again.

Here’s the dark coyote from the pair with the gun that did the deed.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v62/Silverfox_ND/2007-08%20Hunting%20Season/5-13-2008/Yote_Gun-Close--small.jpg

Here's a wide shot view of the coyote with you looking to the southeast. The coyotes came from over a hill quite a ways left of the left side of the photo.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v62/Silverfox_ND/2007-08%20Hunting%20Season/5-13-2008/Yote_Gun-wide_Text--small.jpg

Here’s the “Hero Photo” in living color!!! The “Hero” looks tired!!!

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v62/Silverfox_ND/2007-08%20Hunting%20Season/5-13-2008/Hero-3--small.jpg

By the time I finished up with the photos and got back to rancher’s house, it was close to 10:00 p.m. The rancher was very pleased and invited me in for a cup of coffee, which I politely refused because I was bone tired and ready to take a bath and get some sleep. Too much fresh air and exercise for an old man like me makes me sleepy!!!

llg
05-15-2008, 11:33 PM
So what caused the click, no whap? I hate it when it does that.

4 years ago I bought 4000 large rifle primers at an auction for $4. A good deal then, great deal now. They were old Remington primers. They have worked great until this year. Now some have failed to fire. Guess when we all get old, that happens.

Silverfox_in_ND
05-15-2008, 11:42 PM
llg--I haven't pulled the bullet and decapped the casing yet. I was pretty disgusted when that happened. That is only the second time I have had such a mishap. I have reloaded and fired tens of thousands of handloads, so I guess that isn't too bad, but it cost me a legitimate chance for a double on coyotes that were harrassing this rancher's cattle. I may go out there and see if I can call in the remaining coyote in the next day or two.

crashcarruthers
05-16-2008, 01:06 AM
Great write up and pics! I know you are enjoying yourself. Good Luck and be Safe.

doughboy
05-16-2008, 06:58 AM
Nice job Silverfox, Had the CLICK thing happen to me once but did not recover with the composure you did:D
Great pics as usual:)
Mike

MI VHNTR
05-16-2008, 12:15 PM
Silverfox, you've done your usual excellent job of telling your story and providing great pictures. Congrats on the coyote and Thanks! Hope you find out what caused the misfire. MI VHNTR

Silverfox_in_ND
05-17-2008, 12:27 AM
Thanks for the compliments on my latest hunt.

I finally got around to pulling the bullet on the cartridge that didn't fire. I used my impact puller and only 7 or 8 grains of powder came out with the bullet??? I looked down into the neck of the casing and the powder was sitting there like it had been glued in place. I am thinking that moisture must have gotten into this casing, but I have no idea how that could have happened. I straightened out a paper clip and used that to loosen the powder and dumped it into a powder pan. Here's a view of what came out of the casing.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v62/Silverfox_ND/204%20Ruger/Primer%20Misfire-5-13-2008/Pwdr_Pan-2--small.jpg

The powder that is tinted yellow is what came out last--it was closest to the primer. Here's a view of a couple of the chunks of yellow tinted powder along with the rest of the powder up at the top of the photo:

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v62/Silverfox_ND/204%20Ruger/Primer%20Misfire-5-13-2008/Pwdr_paper-3--small.jpg

The primer did not appear to have ignited, but there was a dark spot--soot like spot--in the center of the bottom of the anvil. This isn't a very good photo, but you can see it didn't ignite.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v62/Silverfox_ND/204%20Ruger/Primer%20Misfire-5-13-2008/Primer--small.jpg

I also inspected the other cartridges that I have in the magazine in the rifle, checked the ones that I carry in the pockets of my hunting pants, and cehcked the others I had in my cartridge box in my pickup. I visually inspected them and also shook them to see if I could feel the powder move inside the casing. I use a load of 28.0 gr. of H4895, so there isn't much empty space in the casing, but you can feel the powder move when you shake them. I could feel the powder move in every one of those 15 loaded cartridges. I am at a loss as to how the powder got stuck together like it was and what made it turn yellow? Could there have been a tiny bit of primer ignition that wasn't hot enough to ignite the powder but caused the powder to change color? It is a mystery to me. If anyone has any ideas on what happened, I'd sure be interested in hearing those ideas.

llg
05-17-2008, 01:47 AM
Moisture with the powder and then the primer only dried the powder rather than igniting it causing it to yellow.
If that be the case, you could have other cases with moisture loaded at the same time. I think to be on the safe side, I would load me up a new batch and save these for paper targets.

We don't want those 4 legged targets to get away!

John in CA.
05-18-2008, 11:39 PM
You still got the one!

Back in March, I delivered a car on a trailer to a Canadian from Weyburn, Saskatchewan. We agreed to meet in Fortuna, N. Dakota. I got there early and it was about 20 and wind howling, so decided to get some fuel and wait in the truck. But there is no gas in Fortuna so a local told me to go east 20 miles to Crosby. I did. And had lunch there on main street near the old movie theatre and city hall. Cute little hamburger joint and video rental store. Good hamburger! :D

Had I known you were in that part of the state, Silv, I would have emailed you! For some reason, I thought you lived in the south-central part. Bummer. But I'll get up there again to buy you lunch.

OH, and forgot, when I left Crosby and headed west on the hiway, there was a Coyote walking right across the road, near the oil rig on the left about a mile or two out of town. Looked at me and just kept walking. Fur sure looks good on them up there.

Good calling to you!

Silverfox_in_ND
05-19-2008, 11:05 AM
John in CA.--Where have you been???? I haven't seen you posting much on the Board. I sure miss your stories and photos, so get busy and give us some more of those pictures and narratives.

When you were in Fortuna, ND, you were only 62 miles north of Williston. In Crosby, ND, you were about 68 miles away from Williston. The area around Fortuna doesn't have a lot of human beings living there. There's lots of room for coyotes!!!! You make sure you look me up the next time you get up this way.

mwatson
05-19-2008, 12:20 PM
Great story with a great ending. Be sure and post again I enjoyed all.
Mike

DDgofer
05-19-2008, 01:13 PM
Never seen this problem with Hodgdon powder, but have seen it with RL 7 and RL15 as well as XMP 5744.

http://www.fototime.com/CCA7B1642974BE0/standard.jpg

Not contaminated powder, mild primers. Remington large rifle. It appeared that all the primer did was burn the graphite coating off. The powder left in the case did ignite later.

Solution was a hotter primer--Federal large rifle.

John in CA.
05-19-2008, 01:41 PM
John in CA.--Where have you been???? I haven't seen you posting much on the Board. I sure miss your stories and photos, so get busy and give us some more of those pictures and narratives.

When you were in Fortuna, ND, you were only 62 miles north of Williston. In Crosby, ND, you were about 68 miles away from Williston. The area around Fortuna doesn't have a lot of human beings living there. There's lots of room for coyotes!!!! You make sure you look me up the next time you get up this way.

HA, Ironically I stayed the night in Williston, a motel near where hiways 2 and the main north/south road are! I had driven from Sweetgrass Montana that day, east....on beautiful hiway 2 across northern Montana.

I promise to look you up on the next trip. It is a beautiful state. I spent Easter sunday in Rugby. The folks there are nice as can be. Take care. And I'll get the guns & calls out later in the summer/fall.