Well after already dumping close to 2300 rounds into p-dogs in the last 2 months I figured time to post up.
Memorial weekend was not the best as it pretty much rained every day & early evenings about 3-4pm on.
My pal & I took 3 coyote off 1 ranch spot early from 5am to 11am.
I have 11 coyote shot in the last 2 months from the one spot on the cattle ranch.
We saw 5 total calling them.
We laid another 240 or so rounds into p-dogs from 12-3pm.
This spot has not been shot in for 8+ years. They are spread 4 miles long and maybe 3/4+ mile wide filling many valleys and hill sides with very, very dumb p-dogs (for now). Many triples, a few quads, to many doubles to count.
Shooting a Savage .223 build w/a midway ER Shaw 1/14" tw 24" bbl, suppressed on top of that.
I told him not to shoot w/his 243AI due to the ear blasting noise (not threaded for his suppressor) and to use my Savage build. He left his suppressed rigs at home this time out.
I let him start off on the p-dogs and spotted for him. He just could not miss with my rig & said he wanted to have me build him a savage p-dog rig. Ive been telling him for eons a 243 for p-dogs is a waste of powder, but he does shoot 600-1100 yards with it. I wont shoot within 100 yards of him though just due to the muzzle blast. He went 53 rounds from 89 yards to 344 yards before he finally missed one w/my .223.
Sunday we had a rain storm move in & I was still shooting them until the rain started to blast into my face & I kept shooting then had to give it up when then lighting started striking pretty bad and that did it, we jumped in the ranger & packed out.
It was funny, raining hard and those p-dogs stayed out like it was nothing.
I dont take p-dog pics any longer as they all look the same, red splat and parts.
1 of the coyotes I called in for my pal
It nice to have another pal who leaves his Polaris ranger 900 with me so I can run it all over ranches when he cant make it.
The rolling hills across the bottom pastures a mile a behind my friends noggin are where the p-dogs start.

Memorial weekend was not the best as it pretty much rained every day & early evenings about 3-4pm on.
My pal & I took 3 coyote off 1 ranch spot early from 5am to 11am.
I have 11 coyote shot in the last 2 months from the one spot on the cattle ranch.
We saw 5 total calling them.
We laid another 240 or so rounds into p-dogs from 12-3pm.
This spot has not been shot in for 8+ years. They are spread 4 miles long and maybe 3/4+ mile wide filling many valleys and hill sides with very, very dumb p-dogs (for now). Many triples, a few quads, to many doubles to count.
Shooting a Savage .223 build w/a midway ER Shaw 1/14" tw 24" bbl, suppressed on top of that.
I told him not to shoot w/his 243AI due to the ear blasting noise (not threaded for his suppressor) and to use my Savage build. He left his suppressed rigs at home this time out.
I let him start off on the p-dogs and spotted for him. He just could not miss with my rig & said he wanted to have me build him a savage p-dog rig. Ive been telling him for eons a 243 for p-dogs is a waste of powder, but he does shoot 600-1100 yards with it. I wont shoot within 100 yards of him though just due to the muzzle blast. He went 53 rounds from 89 yards to 344 yards before he finally missed one w/my .223.
Sunday we had a rain storm move in & I was still shooting them until the rain started to blast into my face & I kept shooting then had to give it up when then lighting started striking pretty bad and that did it, we jumped in the ranger & packed out.
It was funny, raining hard and those p-dogs stayed out like it was nothing.
I dont take p-dog pics any longer as they all look the same, red splat and parts.
1 of the coyotes I called in for my pal
It nice to have another pal who leaves his Polaris ranger 900 with me so I can run it all over ranches when he cant make it.
The rolling hills across the bottom pastures a mile a behind my friends noggin are where the p-dogs start.
