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182 results found Next Page >Showing results 1 through 10
Sort your results:Existing Search Criteria:Refine Your Search:Search Results:Texas Trophy Hunters Extravaganza
Summary:
That is a lot of gun. I put my Remington 700P .308 with a John's Gun Suppressor for sale at a store called, Sportsman's Finest on the west side of Austin. They said they would pay me $1500. Shooting a Hornady 150 grain SST out of that gun or a TTI armory 170 grain subsonic flat point is/was very satisfying. Here is a link to some neat photos of breaking the gun in: CLICK HERE Did I buy the wrong rifle?Summary:
I shoot .12 slug and .44mag when hunting for personal enjoyment. I shoot .308 for culling larger game and .223 for varmints. I inherited and shoot for fun 30-06, .303, and .300winmag. My next all-around hunting/hiking/stalking gun is probably going to be a .270 because it is a 30-06 load necked down to a .270 bullet (what I understand); it is very flat shooting and zero@200 is plus/minus 3 inches between the muzzle and just shy of 300 yards. I would have no buyers remorse. Either one is fine for any animal in Texas, assuming a shot with in a 6" circle of the vitals (regarless of what distance). negative impact of feeding deerSummary:
Two very interesting points you bring up. 1. Unethical is a complex word. Is it more ethical to harvest a deer with a long bow or shoot it in the ear with a rifle? Assuming equally good shot placement, it is hard to argue that the long bow is NOT more painful to the animal and a bloodier, slower death. If I were choosing how I was going to die in battle, I vote for the bullet in my left ear rather than an arrow through my lungs. For the niche of people who hunt with spears (I have only met one person who has actually harvested a whitetail with a spear), how would you react to him telling you that you are unethical because you use a mechanical instrument to launch a projectile instead of your own body strength? Where is the line of what you call unethical? Or, is it unethical to hunt for sport in general? Should you only be allowed to "harvest" a deer if you are in NEED of food? The word "harvest" does sound a lot like farming. If you are hunting for food, young does taste better than old bucks. So we should harvest yearlings, like we butcher cattle at a young age. Which is more unethical, to kill yearling does for the best meat or old bucks for the best trophy antlers? My grandmother shot the first whitetail she saw – male or female – because was not hunting for sport. She was “harvesting” meat. There were no early mornings, deer stands or deer blinds. In fact, you could argue that her vegetable garden doubled as a “food plot.” Was she unethical with her open sight 30-30 shooting from the door of her mobile home? Why is hunting the mott of oak trees ok, but hunting the waterhole unethical as I mentioned above? 2. Private Property Rights vs. Public Property Rights I don't think you mean that you would trespass on someone's land to shoot a wild animal? If you do, then how do you rationalize the ethics of that action? PS: You do realize that if you trespass on private land with a weapon you will either go to jail, get a big fine, or be killed by the landowner. Texas, unlike many other states, is 95%+ private lands. However, the sun, wind, water (not always), and wildlife (not always) are property of the State. If I choose to raise cows, can you come and harvest my cow - of course not. If I choose to raise quail, turkey, whitetail, pigs, or any other animal - just because that animal also exists in the wild somewhere - does that mean you have a right to harvest it on my land? Of course not. What if I have a natural grove of apple trees and wild berries, are you allowed to trespass and "harvest" the wild fruit on my land? No. Your comments should serve as a wake up call for those who do not realize the perils facing the future of hunting as a sport, as a food source, and as a symbol of the rugged individualism that has defined America's past. Whether you believe your comments, or are just enjoying stirring the pot, I for one appreciate your posts (as long as there are not personal attacks involved.) ? when exotic game gets outSummary:
The exotic game that roams free range in Texas was logically at one time behind a fence on private property. No different that feral pigs were once farm animals. From my past conversations with law enforcement on this issue, my understanding is that if the animal is on your property - especially if it is eating your food plots or protein feeders or in any other way costing you money - that you can dispatch/harvest/shoot/kill whatever word you want to use. What is more of a debate is if the elk was tagged in such a way that it is obviously a domestic farm animal that has crossed the fence. Their is no criminal action by you shooting it according to my understanding, but you are opening yourself up to a civil lawsuit. For example, I have the exact same issue with cows and goats on my land in East Texas. One of the neighbors doesn't maintain his fence and over-grazes his property and as a result, his cows and goats literally break my fence and come into my pastures. They have tore up my hay bails and ruined my dove food plots. I don't have the gumption to shoot the tresspassing cows, but if I ever since he added goats to his already poorly maintained land, if I see a goat on my side of the fence I am going to shoot. How Much Do You Shoot? And How Can We Become Better Shots?
Summary:
Lots of great comments. I will share my opinion: 1. Sight in your gun at a range, on a table, with sand bags in front and back, or better yet, using a gun vice. Know that your gun shoots a certain size pattern at a certain distance with a certain load. Cut out the piece of the box with the ballistics and tape it to your stock to remind you exactly which load you are shooting and the ballistics (if printed). 2. Then remove the sand bags and practice shooting until you can consistently shoot a six inch circle. If you need to brace yourself with your elbows, fine. Practice. Big Breaths. Squeeze. Get to know your trigger. Get to know the kick. Get to feel the stock with your cheek. Holding the gun the same way every time is important. 3. Repeat #2 but shooting free hand, meaning not resting on the table. Do it sitting like in a stand. Do it standing like on a stalk. Do it using a bipod, or other shooting sticks if that is what you are going to have with you in the field. Keep on practicing until you can shoot a 6" circle every time. 4. Go back to resting on the bench with your elbows but this time, go drink two coffees, or two cokes, skip lunch, drink lots of water until you have to pee, and try to shoot now. Yes, I know this sounds crazy but I like to play games with myself like this to challenge if I can control my body under stress. The jitters from caffenine and needing to use the toilet are similar to adreline which is impossible to recreate. 5. Go to an outside range, preferrably not a public range. Set up your target at 100 yards. Run to your target. Run back to your gun. Sit down and try to shoot. Take your gun with you, unloaded, run to the target, run back to your shooting position and try to shoot. Imagine, law enforcement and military snipers have to be able to shoot their target with their heart rate at 150 bpm. Yes their targets are bigger, but not big enough. I would fail this test every time I think. 6. You need to practice at the distance that you are going to shoot in the field. Some people won't shoot more than 100 yards even though the gun can, just as some people won't bowhunt past 20 yards, even though most modern bows are effective out to 40 yards. If you want to shoot at 200 yards, you have to practice outside, with wind, with sun in your face. Make it fun, don't just shoot paper. I like to shoot golf balls, old spray cans, coke cans, water bottles, and any other garbage laying around. Another great target is a box of clay pidgeons that you use to shoot skeet with - hang them on a board and practice shooting. This is also why God made hog hunting and coyote hunting - for you to practice. Finally, breathing, trigger finger movement, not clenching too tight, not looking up, really listening to your body is critical. Focus on your target, not your gun. Put yourself at the target. After 2-3 hours of target shooting I feel so relaxed and totally at peace because I have spent so much time telling my mind to be quiet and feeling my heart beat. One of the big mistakes I make is spending too much time shooting my favorite gun. You need to practice with all the various methods of harvest you use. I don't put enough time into shotguns, pistols, crowbows, compond bows, recurve because I enjoy my .223 and .308 so much. It is like going to the gym and only doing the one exercise for the one muscle group you like. You end up being off balance. Another mistake I make is because I obsess with accuracy. Hunting does not require the level of accuracy that shooting a clay pidgeon at 400 yards requires. I forget to remember than anything inside 4" is perfect, anything inside 6" is fine, anything inside 9" is deadly, regardless of the distance. I get too focused on 1" per 100 Yards. This is a mental mistake I make which I highly recommend you don't do to yourself. Break in your gun properly. Clean your gun properly. Check your scope and other attachments. Clean your scope lens. Take care of your bullets and use the same bullets every time. If your gun isn't shooting accurate enough, try cleaning it, checking all the screws are tight, and shooting different brands and grains of bullets before you buy a new scope or gun. Always wear hearing protection. Most people are as deaf without hearing protection as I am with it on, so it doesn't matter because we are talking loud anyway. Eye Protection is not something I think about, but then again I have been wearing glasses most of my life. Finally, always wash your hands and get the lead residue off before you eat with your fingers. (Can you tell I am a little OCD?) I learned everything I know from my Grandmother Opal, my cousin Lynn Lenderman, my father, and watching many, many people in the field. As Forest Gump would say, "That is all I have to say about that." Public Land TurkeySummary: Does it have to be Public Land Hunting? Last Spring there were so many great turkey guides who were not booked. I am always amazed that spring turkey hunting in Texas isn't more popular. It might be one of the most pretty times of the year to be outdoors. For the price of $150 to $350, depending on the guide, you can get on property where shooting a turkey - or more than one turkey - is because you missed, not because of the lack of turkeys.
182 results found Next Page >Showing results 1 through 10
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