teul2 wrote:Well done sir.
I catch myself watching your in rifle footage and wanting to pull the rifle to a shot I think I can make. It's quite involving. I like it.
This is so much fun for me. Get to ride around all night long looking at the monitor on my dashboard and when I see some I get to jump out and go walk right up to them wearing the helmet and try and blast as many as possible.
The Action is great and the driving around cures the boredom of not seeing anything.
I remember the first running shot on hogs I made. It was a foggy morning and I went to go check the corn feeder before work because they had been coming to it first thing in the morning and I killed three on the feeder, that morning.
Walking back to the truck, the fog really thickened up and I heard a car coming on the highway. I looked up and couldn’t see the car but I saw two black objects halfway between the highway and my position, the approaching car cost them to run towards me.
They were basically running parallel to the Turnrow I was walking out on through a hipped up field which had been rained on recently and was very soft. Luckily the high hips and soft, sloppy conditions slowed their ability to to run greatly and I distinctly remember thinking to myself “I can do this” when they got within range.
They were about 75 yards away and when they first one got perpendicular to me I put the crosshairs out on his nose, continuing to swing through just like I was shooting a dove with my shotgun and pulled the trigger. He tumbled immediately to the ground. The second one was right behind him and I did exact same thing and dang near dropped him right on top of his buddy.
It’s not easy. But it’s not as hard as you think. I use a tripod which helps keep me steady. I wouldn’t say I’m aiming as much as I am trying to keep the horizontal Crosshair in the same plane as the hog.
Come go with me some time Joel.
driven every kind of rig that's ever been made, driven the backroads so I wouldn't get weighed. - Lowell George