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Silverfox gets 'Coyote Fever'--w/photos

Last Thursday,11-9-2006) was an absolute perfect day for calling and I had to be working. I finished up on some work and I had almost given up on going out calling, but when I went outside after work and saw how nice and calm it was, I boogied on home and changed into my hunting duds and headed out of town. I had what you might call--“Coyote Fever.” It had been almost 2 1/2 weeks since I had been out calling and I was getting pretty antsy to get out and give it a try again.

I have permission to hunt on several thousands of acres in the area I was headed to and it is all posted land so not many folks get to go in there. The wind was out of the NE so I decided to try calling in a couple of new spots. I parked the pickup off the road in a stubble field and got all my junk together and took off to the NE down a little valley. I was carrying my Pac-Nor barreled .17 Remington and had it loaded with my 27.8 gr. Hammett BT HP loads that had worked real good on prairie dogs this summer. I hadn’t shot a coyote with this load yet and was anxious to see how this load would perform on coyotes. When I got to a good looking spot to call, I set my FoxPro up in a pile of dead branches and hiked back to the SW of the caller and set up on a side hill and used a buffalo berry bush for a backrest which about 50 yards away from the FoxPro. I was planning on making a short stand in that spot and then hiking in to the east another 1/4 to 1/2 mile and make a 30 to 40 minute last-stand-of-the-day type thing.

I started off with the kitten in distress sound and had the volume down quite low because I only wanted the sound to reach out about 1/4 to 1/2 mile. I called for about 13 minutes and then turned the caller off and sat and waited and watched for about 5 minutes more. Nothing came in. There sure were lots of Canadian geese flying overhead though. It is fun to get out in the country where you can hear all the birds singing, etc.

I packed up and headed east up the side of the hill. When I approached the top, I peeked over and surveyed the situation ahead and made my plans on where to set up. I backed down off the hill and got down lower in elevation and walked around to the east well below the horizon. I got to the hill I wanted to set up on and crept up to the edge and checked out the lay of the land. It looked pretty good. I could see about 300 yards to the north, but had a blind spot to the NW. I felt that was OK because you can’t cover 360 degrees on most stands. The area to the NE, east, SE and east was clearly visible to me and there was a nice bush down below me that I could set the FoxPro in. It was a steep hill and the caller was probably 75 feet below where I set up. This time I used my Spring Hare sound on the FoxPro and played it at medium volume for about 4 minutes. No takers. I could see three mule deer get up out of the next valley to the ESE of me and wondered if there was a coyote that scared them up??? Nothing showed. I increased the volume for a couple minutes, but nothing showed up.

At about the 9 minute mark I turned the sound to an interrogation howl and let that play three howls and switched to the female invitation sound and let that play three howls. Then I turned it to the Coyote Locator sound and let that cycle through for the full 30 seconds. I muted the call and heard coyotes answering from the north, one from the east and a couple howling way to the south of my location. The ones to the north and east sounded like they were no more than a half mile away or so. I switched the sound to the female invitation and let it run for a full 30 second cycle and then ran the interrogation sound for a full 30 seconds and muted the call. I could hear howling from the north again. I set the sound to the spring hare again and lowered the volume level and let it play. At about 15 minutes into the stand, the howling from the coyote to the north got much louder so I knew that coyote had moved in to see who these intruders were. I slowly moved my rifle around to that direction. I thought maybe the coyote was down in my blind spot to the north. I switched the sound to the Kiss of Death and let it play. I could hear the coyote doing a combination bark and howl.

Finally, I spotted the coyote on the hill to the north of me. It was sitting and doing the barking and howling. I watched it through the scope and guesstimated that it was about 250 yards away. I figured that I could make a good hit on this sitting coyote. The wind that was blowing was now almost completely calm. The sitting coyote presented a very nice target. With the solid vertical coyote body, I could misjudge the distance by quite a few yards and still hit the coyote in a vital spot. I was about to turn the power ring up on the scope when all of a sudden I hear a coyote howling from the east and it is fairly close. I can’t see it, but I can hear it. I look and look for it, down in the creek bottom but can’t spot it. I keep scanning to the east, trying to pick up some movement or something that looks out of place, but nothing catches my eye.

I figured I had come upon an area that was right close to the border between the territories of these two different coyotes. The one to the north didn't want to venture and further for fear of getting a butt whoopin' and the one to the east might have still been on its way in, but I sure couldn't see it.

Finally, I looked back up to the north to see where that coyote was and it wasn't where it had been sitting. I scanned the hillside and finally saw that it has moved up the side of the hill about 20 yards from where it had been sitting. The coyote is now standing in a quartering stance to me with its head facing to the NW. I guessed that she was probably 265 to 270 yards away now. The drop on my 27.8 gr. Hammett load is about 2.5 inches at 275 yards. I figured I had better take the shot now or lose the chance for the shot. Like a dunce, I still hadn’t turned up the power ring on the scope; but my adrenalin was pumping pretty good about now, and turning up the power ring didn’t even cross my mind. :o I wanted to get the shot off before this coyote disappeared over the hill! I held right below the fur line on the top of the back. I slowly squeezed the trigger and saw the coyote get hit, I heard it yelping, and saw it do the old death spin about four or five times and then to my dismay, it ran off to the NW and over the hill and out of sight. I got on my coyote howler and did my wounded coyote imitation, hoping the coyote to the east might be duped into coming into range for a shot. After about two or three minutes no additional coyotes had appeared so I decided to try to go find the one I had shot.

Before I left the spot from which I had taken the shot, I took out my range finder and ranged over to the spot the coyote had been standing at and got a reading of 228 yards. I had estimated the distance pretty close to the correct yardage, but thought since the distance was 228 yards and NOT the 265 to 270 I had guessed, I might have held a little high. I was worried that I might have just nicked the top of the coyote and not hit in the vitals.

With no snow on the ground and darkness approaching, I didn’t have a lot of time and not much hope of picking up a blood trail. My only hope was that the coyote had run over the hill and keeled over and didn’t get into a hole or pile of brush. I tried to pick up the blood trail where it was standing when I shot, but it was too dark so I couldn’t find any blood. I walked along to the north, constantly scanning the landscape ahead of me in case it was still moving out. Finally, after walking about 150 yards north of where the coyote had been standing when I shot, I spotted it lying on the prairie about 25 yards ahead of me. I was pretty lucky to be able to find it. In the photo below, you can see some of the brush and rough country this coyote could have gotten into if it had been able to run a ways further. Fortunately, it keeled over right there.

Coyote_location_11-9-2006--small.jpg


I had hit it just a wee bit higher than I like to hit them, but about in the right spot for a shot behind the shoulder bone. At a distance of 228 yards, I guess I have to be pretty happy with the shot from my Pac-Nor barreled .17 Remington and using the 27.8 gr. Hammett BT HP bullets. Especially since I didn’t turn my scope up off of 6.5x!!! I think that is the first time I have taken a long shot on a coyote without cranking up the power ring on the scope. The bullet must have hit near the back and top part of the lungs. Here’s a photo of the exit side. You can see the bright red blood in her mouth, so it was a lung shot indeed.

Coyote_Exit_Side_11-9-2006--small.jpg


Here’s a photo of the coyote, FoxPro and the rifle with the coyote lying exactly the way she was when I found her. The photo was taken from the northwest side of the coyote and she had run to this spot coming from the southeast and going NNW. I forgot to set the clock on my camera, so the time is daylight savings time. It really was 5:33 when I took this photo, not 6:33.

Coyote_Rifle_FoxPro_11-9-2006--smal.jpg


And, of course, we need to have the “Hero” photo as well. What a goofy looking guy!!! I had to set the camera on my butt pack and had to use the flash to get the photo. You can see that the grass in front of the camera is all lit up. I guess one should carry a tripod to get the photos when you are alone, but I carry way too much stuff with me as it is. Maybe I could try to cut threads on the top of my shooting sticks and screw the camera onto that, but I’ll pass on that one.

Coyote_and_Shooter_11-9-2006--small.jpg


I was about a mile away from the pickup, so I got my drag rope on her lower jaw and front feet and started dragging her back to the pickup. I had walked about 175 yards when I discovered I didn’t have my shooting sticks with me. Soooo, I had to trudge back to where she had been lying, look around in the ever darkening night and finally I found the shooting sticks and headed back to pick up the coyote again. I made it back to the pickup at about 6:05 p.m. I got the coyote strung up in the back of the pickup and made a phone call to my wife and told her I’d be home for supper in about a half hour.

I didn’t weigh the coyote, but I’d guess she will probably weigh in at around 25 pounds. From the looks of her teeth, I’d guess she is 2 or 3 years old. The neighbor’s dog has been going berserk and barking his fool head off. I don’t imagine he likes the coyote hanging on the fence.

I let the coyote cool off outside Thursday night and will probably put it in the chest-type freezer I have in the patio if it starts to warm up outside. It feels good to have the first coyote of the season hanging up in the back yard. Too bad deer season opened up today,Friday, 11-10-2006) or I’d probably be out lying on the prairie trying to fool a few more coyotes.

Well, I’m glad I got “Coyote Fever” and went out last night. I came real close to not going out. I was very happy I got a chance to shoot a coyote with the 27.8 gr. Hammett bullets. I need to shoot a few more with that load before I form a solid opinion on how they perform, but this coyote isn’t complaining!!!! The entrance and exit wounds were tiny, so the bullet worked good from that aspect. While the bullet did not anchor the coyote on the spot, the coyote was not going to live more than a few seconds after the shot. I'm not sure that my .204 Ruger would have put that coyote down on the spot either, but then we'll never know!!!
 
Hi silver fox.
enjoyed your hunting tale;that old adrenalin rush you get is very hard to replicate and still stay legal.

one question; you say the coyote ran off even with a good hit why not try [im not teaching you to suck eggs here]v-max/a-max type ammo?.
I shoot foxes with my 17 remington/tikka action with nothing but 20 v-max home loads the fox is nailed to the spot and very rarily get exit wounds.when picked up the fox is best described as a bag of soup.Any way keep up the good work on those varmints .From the other side of the pond thanks
gary w.
 
Silverfox, I also enjoyed the write-up. Makes me want to get going on the coyotes around here. Two weeks ago, in broad daylight, one was at the back fence eying my German Short-hair Pointer pup. Ran off before I was able to get my rifle.

Seems around here the coyotes are much bolder than they use to be. My neighbor lost all of his geese and a few chickens to them.
shcal
 
I too, enjoyed the story. However, I am curious as to why you didn't use the rangefinder before the shot? Not enough time you figure?

Mike
 
Thanks for the nice comments.

garyw--The reason I don't use V-Max bullets is because I have had bad experiences with them on coyotes in my .17 Remingtons. I have had many surface splash hits and then you wind up spending hours trying to track a wounded coyote. While a 20 gr. V-Max might be great for the thin-skinned and light-weight fox, I personally don't think it is a good choice for coyotes up here in North Dakota that will weigh between 25 to 35 pounds or more. Here's a photo of a coyote I shot with a 20 gr. V-Max. I did manage to track it down and finish it off:

Manged_Male--6-23-2004--small.jpg


wildcatter1450--Yep, good question about why I didn't use the range finder to get the exact yardage. Here's my story and I'm sticking to it--I seldom try to use the range finder after a coyote has come into view, especially when it is as close as this one was. Even at a distance of 228 yards, I believe those coyotes can spot even small movement on the callers part. My range finder was in my butt pack and that butt pack was behind me and about 12 to 15 feet from where I was lying. The extra movement of me reaching about 12 to 15 feet away from where I was lying to get my butt pack, unzipping the pack, rummaging through the main compartment to get the range finder, opening the case, getting the range finder up to my eye and getting the range may have been more than enough movement to scare the coyote off. The time required to get the range finder and use it could have meant that the coyote would have likely been over the hill even if my movement didn't scare it off. In hindsight, the time to do some range finding would have been BEFORE I started calling. Many times that is exactly what I do, but I get careless at times and do not take the time to do that on every stand. Fortunately, my guesstimate as to the distance this time was close enough to bring home the fur.

Like I mentioned in the writeup, I figured the coyote I shot was on the extreme south end of its territory and WAS NOT going to come any further south. Then when the other coyote came along and was howling and barking from the east, I think that sealed the deal that the coyote to the north was going to head back closer to the center of her territory.
 
Great story! I went out last Sunday early am. Neighbor milks 500 or so. In their dry cow/calving pasture a cow dropped twins last year coyotes had killed the 1st one and were chewing on the 2nd one as it was being born. The farmer was there just as it happened he was PO'd.

Anyways I set up in the lower pasture where the young stock are. I think this is ideal. Heifers never stirred at all. Life is good. Used the locator no response wait awile and use the fawn bawl... here come 50 heifers at a dead run, sounds like a stampede on TV.

50 heifers pushing and shoving looking at the little crying fawn :-). A couple noticed a lump in the hedge row so here come 15-20 lick and sniff.

So much for that set up!
 
This story was a good read, thanks for doing it for everone...
I'll stick to my 6mm Ackley and 80 grain Fowlers for those 300 yard shots, they don't move hardly at all..........
 
Point taken re:light bullets;foxes over here rarely go above 20-25 pounds in weight.I think [might be wrong!] the heaviest fox shot this side of the pond was 34 pounds ;it was shot by a game keeper in Scotland.Heaviest one i shot was just over 20; shot with 20 tactical 4 weeks ago;it had been feasting on some rare breed chickens.

Sorry to go on but; dont you train your self in range estimation?.iv done it to a certain level;you get a friend to drop golf balls on a patch of land you shoot over drop them at various distances from 100-300 yards then let rip! allow 3 shots at each have the shots spotted for misses .I soon learned to range estimate.The difference between our hunting areas would be vast;i shoot over farm land that has fields 100-300 yds at best.and i know the terrain ;what does throw a huge spanner into the works is when lamping foxes at night;the human excuse for a brain has a hard task trying to determine range through a scope at night with a spotlight for illuminating the target.BUT rifle set up to hold dead on out to 300 yds = dead fox.

just my 2 bobs worth gary w.
 
garyw-- I do train myself on range estimation. I play golf :D I also shoot lots of prairie dogs in the summer and fall months which does help in range estimation. However, the coyote that I shot, was on the side of a tall hill and I was to the south of that on another hill. The hill I was on dropped off below me very steeply and the hill the coyote was on was also a very steep drop. With only a deep valley between me and the coyote, I think I did pretty good at guesstimating the distance. It is very difficult for me to gauge distances in a situation like I just described. How about you? Do you lose some sense of distance when you have no points of reference like the situation I was in?
 
OK SILVER FOX got the point about golf:D
the only thing i do on a golf course is shoot rabbits and foxes with afriend of mine all legal of course!
I agree with you on featureless terrain but the beauty about our country side and farm land [with the exception of the grouse mmors]is there will always a tree;gate way;fence line;building etc to give a point of referance.When out foxing we usually call[squeek] to draw old charlie in;if nothing shows in the lamp then we move maybe 50-80 yds call again.range estimation at night is harder but like i say we usually have a point of referance.Also the guy lamping for you will also give a opinion of range usually he will be an experienced shot; like they say two half wits=one brain.

As an added question do you hunt for fur or for vermin control?
fox shooting over here is purely vermin control due to the amount of destruction foxes can do.
thanks garyw.
 
Silverfox, if you only had a 243 Winchester or a 6br to use for coyotes what would you use for a bullet trying to save the pelts?

I have 65gr V-Max's loaded for the 243 leaving the muzzle @ 3550 fps. They would be very harsh at close range. I also have 68gr Wildcat Extreme bullets from Richard Graves loaded with the same load but travelling approx 100fps slower.

Should I maybe lighten the loads a tad still trying to maintain some decent accuracy? What are the thoughts ?

Here is a pic of a 31.5lb female I shot this past Friday while sitting out deer hunting. She was mighty plump. Well fed. I forgot my deer grunt but had my distress calls. I thought what the HEY. Approx 10 minutes later out she comes. 129yard shot with the 150gr Hornady Interbond travelling at approx 2950 out of the good ole '06. Little hard on her but she never suffered.


Calvin
 

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cycbb486-- A quick question--Does the flank area of that coyote exhibit a case of mange? Did that coyote have well developed guard hairs? From the photo, it doesn't appear to have guard hairs--at least they aren't visible to my old eyes.

I have not used many of the plastic-tipped bullets on coyotes mainly because most of those bullet seem to be intended for MAXIMUM carnage and I want MINIMUM carnage on the coyote hides. I have killed a few coyotes with the 32 gr. V-Max shot out of my Savage 12VLP in .204 Ruger. There was little to no fur damage on those shots, but that was because those coyotes were looking right straight at me and the bullets entered right between their shoulders just a bit below the neck/shoulder junction. Tiny entrance hole--no exit. I also used a 20 gr. V-Max out of my Lilja barreled .17 Remington on a coyote and got a huge surface wound on the coyotes neck and no penetration into the neck.

The .243 used to be my coyote caliber back when I could only afford to own one rifle and that had to be used for deer, coyotes, fox and prairie dogs. I tried a variety of bullets and at one juncture I was thinking that the solid jaketed bullets would be the real deal. Tiny entrance hole, tiny exit hole--no fur damage!!!

In my experience that WAS NOT the case. I tried both the 90 gr. SJKT and 80 gr. SJKT bullets in my .243. If these SJKT bullets hit bone, they tended to tumble and tear a huge hole in the hide. If the bullets didn't hit bone and went through the animal, the wound holes on entrance and exit sides close up real fast and what little bleeding did take place was absorbed by the thick fur on the coyotes making tracking without any snow virtually impossible. The bullets didn't seem to impart any of their enegry into the body of the coyotes and they often ran a half mile or more before they bled out internally. Not only that, but these bullets weren't extremely accurate either.

I tried the 70 gr. and 87 gr. Horandy spire point bullets and had a lot better success with those bullet. Dead coyotes, pretty much on the spot, and while I had plenty of exit holes, the holes were not so big that they couldn't be sewed up easily. The 87 gr. bullet seemed to be more fur friendly, probably because I wasn't "hotrodding" that one like I was the 70 gr. bullet. I think the BC on the 87 grainer has to be waaay better than the 70 gr. pill too. As you know, that's an important factor in windy conditons and also when you have to make long range shots.

I have never seen the Wildcat bullets you mentioned, but upon doing an Intenet search, I see that all the .243 caliber bullets are HP in design. When I was still shooting a 22-250 for coyotes, I did use both the 52 gr. Speer HP and also used the 55 gr. Speer Spitzer soft point bullets with good success on coyotes. The 52 gr. Sierra HP match bullet has been used with mixed results--it seems to blow fairly large holes in the hides more often than not.

For your 6mm and .243 I would think that slowing that HP Wildcat bullet down a wee bit might prove to be fairly fur friendly. You'll just have to give it a try and find out. If they don't work out, I would also suggest giving the 87 gr. Spire point bullet or a similar soft-pointed bullet a chance, if they are still being made.
 
It did not appear to have mange from what I could see. She had a thick coat but as you mention guard hairs I think it did not really have any that stick out in my mind. Is that something that is possibly brought on by temp? Or no matter what the temps the quard hairs should be there something like the Whitetails hair changes?

That area in the flank that may appear to look thin was just the way the hair was laying. I was checking it over and never brushed it back.

The pictures were not the greatest. It was really sunny out. I should have taken her out of the truck into the shade to snap the pictures. Next time.

Thanks for the thoughts on bullets Silverfox.


Calvin
 
Last Thursday,11-9-2006) was an absolute perfect day for calling and I had to be working. I finished up on some work and I had almost given up on going out calling, but when I went outside after work and saw how nice and calm it was, I boogied on home and changed into my hunting duds and headed out of town. I had what you might call--“Coyote Fever.†It had been almost 2 1/2 weeks since I had been out calling and I was getting pretty antsy to get out and give it a try again.

I have permission to hunt on several thousands of acres in the area I was headed to and it is all posted land so not many folks get to go in there. The wind was out of the NE so I decided to try calling in a couple of new spots. I parked the pickup off the road in a stubble field and got all my junk together and took off to the NE down a little valley. I was carrying my Pac-Nor barreled .17 Remington and had it loaded with my 27.8 gr. Hammett BT HP loads that had worked real good on prairie dogs this summer. I hadn’t shot a coyote with this load yet and was anxious to see how this load would perform on coyotes. When I got to a good looking spot to call, I set my FoxPro up in a pile of dead branches and hiked back to the SW of the caller and set up on a side hill and used a buffalo berry bush for a backrest which about 50 yards away from the FoxPro. I was planning on making a short stand in that spot and then hiking in to the east another 1/4 to 1/2 mile and make a 30 to 40 minute last-stand-of-the-day type thing.

I started off with the kitten in distress sound and had the volume down quite low because I only wanted the sound to reach out about 1/4 to 1/2 mile. I called for about 13 minutes and then turned the caller off and sat and waited and watched for about 5 minutes more. Nothing came in. There sure were lots of Canadian geese flying overhead though. It is fun to get out in the country where you can hear all the birds singing, etc.

I packed up and headed east up the side of the hill. When I approached the top, I peeked over and surveyed the situation ahead and made my plans on where to set up. I backed down off the hill and got down lower in elevation and walked around to the east well below the horizon. I got to the hill I wanted to set up on and crept up to the edge and checked out the lay of the land. It looked pretty good. I could see about 300 yards to the north, but had a blind spot to the NW. I felt that was OK because you can’t cover 360 degrees on most stands. The area to the NE, east, SE and east was clearly visible to me and there was a nice bush down below me that I could set the FoxPro in. It was a steep hill and the caller was probably 75 feet below where I set up. This time I used my Spring Hare sound on the FoxPro and played it at medium volume for about 4 minutes. No takers. I could see three mule deer get up out of the next valley to the ESE of me and wondered if there was a coyote that scared them up??? Nothing showed. I increased the volume for a couple minutes, but nothing showed up.

At about the 9 minute mark I turned the sound to an interrogation howl and let that play three howls and switched to the female invitation sound and let that play three howls. Then I turned it to the Coyote Locator sound and let that cycle through for the full 30 seconds. I muted the call and heard coyotes answering from the north, one from the east and a couple howling way to the south of my location. The ones to the north and east sounded like they were no more than a half mile away or so. I switched the sound to the female invitation and let it run for a full 30 second cycle and then ran the interrogation sound for a full 30 seconds and muted the call. I could hear howling from the north again. I set the sound to the spring hare again and lowered the volume level and let it play. At about 15 minutes into the stand, the howling from the coyote to the north got much louder so I knew that coyote had moved in to see who these intruders were. I slowly moved my rifle around to that direction. I thought maybe the coyote was down in my blind spot to the north. I switched the sound to the Kiss of Death and let it play. I could hear the coyote doing a combination bark and howl.

Finally, I spotted the coyote on the hill to the north of me. It was sitting and doing the barking and howling. I watched it through the scope and guesstimated that it was about 250 yards away. I figured that I could make a good hit on this sitting coyote. The wind that was blowing was now almost completely calm. The sitting coyote presented a very nice target. With the solid vertical coyote body, I could misjudge the distance by quite a few yards and still hit the coyote in a vital spot. I was about to turn the power ring up on the scope when all of a sudden I hear a coyote howling from the east and it is fairly close. I can’t see it, but I can hear it. I look and look for it, down in the creek bottom but can’t spot it. I keep scanning to the east, trying to pick up some movement or something that looks out of place, but nothing catches my eye.

I figured I had come upon an area that was right close to the border between the territories of these two different coyotes. The one to the north didn't want to venture and further for fear of getting a butt whoopin' and the one to the east might have still been on its way in, but I sure couldn't see it.

Finally, I looked back up to the north to see where that coyote was and it wasn't where it had been sitting. I scanned the hillside and finally saw that it has moved up the side of the hill about 20 yards from where it had been sitting. The coyote is now standing in a quartering stance to me with its head facing to the NW. I guessed that she was probably 265 to 270 yards away now. The drop on my 27.8 gr. Hammett load is about 2.5 inches at 275 yards. I figured I had better take the shot now or lose the chance for the shot. Like a dunce, I still hadn’t turned up the power ring on the scope; but my adrenalin was pumping pretty good about now, and turning up the power ring didn’t even cross my mind. :eek: I wanted to get the shot off before this coyote disappeared over the hill! I held right below the fur line on the top of the back. I slowly squeezed the trigger and saw the coyote get hit, I heard it yelping, and saw it do the old death spin about four or five times and then to my dismay, it ran off to the NW and over the hill and out of sight. I got on my coyote howler and did my wounded coyote imitation, hoping the coyote to the east might be duped into coming into range for a shot. After about two or three minutes no additional coyotes had appeared so I decided to try to go find the one I had shot.

Before I left the spot from which I had taken the shot, I took out my range finder and ranged over to the spot the coyote had been standing at and got a reading of 228 yards. I had estimated the distance pretty close to the correct yardage, but thought since the distance was 228 yards and NOT the 265 to 270 I had guessed, I might have held a little high. I was worried that I might have just nicked the top of the coyote and not hit in the vitals.

With no snow on the ground and darkness approaching, I didn’t have a lot of time and not much hope of picking up a blood trail. My only hope was that the coyote had run over the hill and keeled over and didn’t get into a hole or pile of brush. I tried to pick up the blood trail where it was standing when I shot, but it was too dark so I couldn’t find any blood. I walked along to the north, constantly scanning the landscape ahead of me in case it was still moving out. Finally, after walking about 150 yards north of where the coyote had been standing when I shot, I spotted it lying on the prairie about 25 yards ahead of me. I was pretty lucky to be able to find it. In the photo below, you can see some of the brush and rough country this coyote could have gotten into if it had been able to run a ways further. Fortunately, it keeled over right there.

Coyote_location_11-9-2006--small.jpg


I had hit it just a wee bit higher than I like to hit them, but about in the right spot for a shot behind the shoulder bone. At a distance of 228 yards, I guess I have to be pretty happy with the shot from my Pac-Nor barreled .17 Remington and using the 27.8 gr. Hammett BT HP bullets. Especially since I didn’t turn my scope up off of 6.5x!!! I think that is the first time I have taken a long shot on a coyote without cranking up the power ring on the scope. The bullet must have hit near the back and top part of the lungs. Here’s a photo of the exit side. You can see the bright red blood in her mouth, so it was a lung shot indeed.

Coyote_Exit_Side_11-9-2006--small.jpg


Here’s a photo of the coyote, FoxPro and the rifle with the coyote lying exactly the way she was when I found her. The photo was taken from the northwest side of the coyote and she had run to this spot coming from the southeast and going NNW. I forgot to set the clock on my camera, so the time is daylight savings time. It really was 5:33 when I took this photo, not 6:33.

Coyote_Rifle_FoxPro_11-9-2006--smal.jpg


And, of course, we need to have the “Hero†photo as well. What a goofy looking guy!!! I had to set the camera on my butt pack and had to use the flash to get the photo. You can see that the grass in front of the camera is all lit up. I guess one should carry a tripod to get the photos when you are alone, but I carry way too much stuff with me as it is. Maybe I could try to cut threads on the top of my shooting sticks and screw the camera onto that, but I’ll pass on that one.

Coyote_and_Shooter_11-9-2006--small.jpg


I was about a mile away from the pickup, so I got my drag rope on her lower jaw and front feet and started dragging her back to the pickup. I had walked about 175 yards when I discovered I didn’t have my shooting sticks with me. Soooo, I had to trudge back to where she had been lying, look around in the ever darkening night and finally I found the shooting sticks and headed back to pick up the coyote again. I made it back to the pickup at about 6:05 p.m. I got the coyote strung up in the back of the pickup and made a phone call to my wife and told her I’d be home for supper in about a half hour.

I didn’t weigh the coyote, but I’d guess she will probably weigh in at around 25 pounds. From the looks of her teeth, I’d guess she is 2 or 3 years old. The neighbor’s dog has been going berserk and barking his fool head off. I don’t imagine he likes the coyote hanging on the fence.

I let the coyote cool off outside Thursday night and will probably put it in the chest-type freezer I have in the patio if it starts to warm up outside. It feels good to have the first coyote of the season hanging up in the back yard. Too bad deer season opened up today,Friday, 11-10-2006) or I’d probably be out lying on the prairie trying to fool a few more coyotes.

Well, I’m glad I got “Coyote Fever†and went out last night. I came real close to not going out. I was very happy I got a chance to shoot a coyote with the 27.8 gr. Hammett bullets. I need to shoot a few more with that load before I form a solid opinion on how they perform, but this coyote isn’t complaining!!!! The entrance and exit wounds were tiny, so the bullet worked good from that aspect. While the bullet did not anchor the coyote on the spot, the coyote was not going to live more than a few seconds after the shot. I'm not sure that my .204 Ruger would have put that coyote down on the spot either, but then we'll never know!!!
The 204 would have done the job perfectly, 17's are awesome.
 
Hope he is ok,loved seeing his posts here and on Saubiers.
I know his back gave him some serious trouble.
Matt
 
LeRoy (aka Silverfox) is one of the coolest dudes I've ever talked to. We used to talk through PM's couple times a month and as many of you know he always had write ups that were well worth the time it took to read them but he's kind of gone radio silent for well over a year now on all the different forums I'd see him on. I hope Lee is well and he just found other things to do with his time.
 
Leroy made a post some where just this past week. Think he still having some back problems.
 

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