On day two I started at 730, knowing we had to head out around 1PM for Colorado to see my son.
Upon arrival it was 80 degrees with an estimated 15MPH steady crosswind. Due to drought the landscape was lunar. Hardly a blade of grass in sight. Mark said that was terrible for his cattle but if any rattlers were out, I would see them. Thanks pardner...I hate snakes.
I started out shooting from the same spot but within an hour all the p-dogs that were close were either dead or educated and hiding. I took my tripod and went about 200 yards away from the van deeper into the "town". I set up on a knoll that overlooked an area I had not been able to see into the day before. PD scurried all over, out to 350 yards. I brought out the 722 222. I was shooting 50 grain TNT over Benchmark at about 3100 FPS. I soon discovered that if I turned the scope to 10X (same Leupold VX2 6-18) I could use the point of the heavy plex at 100, 200 and 300 in full value 90 degree wind as my aim point. Pure luck and serendipity. But it sure worked out some evil on the PD's. I cleaned a pile of them off at 200-275, with a few more at 300-350. I saw those turtles again, and no badgers.
I went back to the truck for more ammo...duh...and on my return walk discovered this guy about twenty feet from my tripod, having come out of a hole for the sun. Mark was right, with no grass it stood out like a bare chested girl in a church.
Note to self: Remember to put your 38 in your holster when venturing out in cooler weather...unfriendlies may take up residence under your tripod or nearby when you are off getting ammo.
Off topic, but I discovered that a 2 inch snubby 38 will shoot 135 grain bullets and snake shot about a foot below where you aim. I didn't know that.
Note to self: Don't ever again discover this while blasting haplessly at a pissed off rattler. Eventually a round found the mark and it was fire for effect. For all you snake lovers...go on, hate me. No I didn't eat it, nor skin it, nor touch that disgusting spawn of Satan that wiggled and jiggled for an hour after its head and neck were no longer one. Just saying...
The heat did take a toll on the 222. I put a wet towel on the barrel and it worked like a charm lowering the temp. The 50 grain TNT will certainly open up a PD. I shot my first, second, third and fourth double with it. I learned that if two pups are standing face to face "fighting", a TNT to the chest of one will not only get him but his buddy, while blowing both three feet in opposite directions. Cool.
I also got a triple. Three were crouched in a line, facing me. A TNT to the face of the first spread him out everywhere, eviserated #2 and shrapnel and parts killed the third guy in line. Amazing stuff.
My kill percentage went up, with several strings of 10-12 hits in a row. I also managed several 6-8 round strings of misses, truth be told.
In the end it was 156 total for two days.
We left OK wanting to shoot again, but very happy to have the pleasure of seeing Mark again and knowing we could return soon, or next year.
We went off to CO where I spent a day with my son and his new 308 at the range, popping steel. We met his church friends, enjoyed great fellowship, met new people and loved Canon City. We stayed a week and because I liked the scope on my son's rifle I ordered one from Eurooptic, a Vortex Strike Eagle 4-24 MOA. For $299 it was a no brainer.
We took three "days" to drive home, sleeping in rest stops (actually an adventure and cheap!) and hitting the gas stations and burger places for food. It was a great time to reevaluate life, slow down, live in the moment, hear God speak and even listen a little.. It was great to be home safely and it was bittersweet to return the van to Hertz today. It was a grand trip and a very special way to celebrate 35 years of marriage to the good Mrs. Snert.
