Wind.
I hate it.
But if you are going to hunt prairie dogs in NW Kansas you might as well learn how to shoot in it or be miserable.
We are finishing up day four up here where I swear you can make out the curvature of the earth. Nothing to stop the wind except barb wire fences.
We hunted here last year and the dogs count is again high but so is wind speed. More so than we recall in the past. We did have one afternoon the wind dropped below 5 mph for about two hours and the number of 100 yards + kills went up significantly. The remainder of our time here has been no less than 10 mph. Oh well, enough about the wind. At least it didn’t rain on us...
Being out in the fields and away from home for ten days straight, we all brought a backup gun. You never know what may happen. Our first year we had a gun suddenly and for no apparent reason decided to release all of its air through the fill port. So if we think we may break it or lose it, we take a spare.
Our guns of choice are;
Joe’s FX .22 Crown shooting the new JSB Knockouts at 950s looking for targets through his MTC Viper Pro. His backup is his FX Impact tuned by AZ shooting a variety of slugs. Mark is shooting a Wildcat Mk1 .25 using JSB Hades at 925fps and glassing dogs with his Athlon Argos with his backup being a Taipan .25 Standard. I am shooting my .25 Cricket with a Georgia Airguns power tune slinging JSB Kings @ 1050fps with a Athlon Argos mounted on top. The Taipan Veteran Compact In .25 is my backup.
We continue to learn something every year we go on our prairie dog hunt. The very first year I hunted, I could hear ‘em but couldn’t see ‘em. I learned you had to be well camo’d and be patience. A quality range finder is a must and you really need to know your holdovers (or clicks if you’re a clicker)at distances you and your gun are capable of shooting.
If you’ve not hunted prairie dogs, one of the things they do is, they will just put their eyes just above their mound and “yip” alerting other dogs. Sometimes they won’t alert. They will just watch you. With heads about 2-3” in size, at distances beyond 50-75 yards, particularly in windy conditions, can be a challenge.
We also would go out into the middle of the field and just sit and wait scanning the mounds. They got used to us being there after 30 minutes of waiting. Occasionally, a few would pop up behind us only to be shot at.
Here is a collage of a few dogs that wondered out of the safety of their burrows only to not make it back.
We arrived in Colorado this evening. Weather is promising. Small chance of rain but no incessantly wind.
I’ll be doing a follow up report this week.
I hate it.
But if you are going to hunt prairie dogs in NW Kansas you might as well learn how to shoot in it or be miserable.
We are finishing up day four up here where I swear you can make out the curvature of the earth. Nothing to stop the wind except barb wire fences.
We hunted here last year and the dogs count is again high but so is wind speed. More so than we recall in the past. We did have one afternoon the wind dropped below 5 mph for about two hours and the number of 100 yards + kills went up significantly. The remainder of our time here has been no less than 10 mph. Oh well, enough about the wind. At least it didn’t rain on us...
Being out in the fields and away from home for ten days straight, we all brought a backup gun. You never know what may happen. Our first year we had a gun suddenly and for no apparent reason decided to release all of its air through the fill port. So if we think we may break it or lose it, we take a spare.
Our guns of choice are;
Joe’s FX .22 Crown shooting the new JSB Knockouts at 950s looking for targets through his MTC Viper Pro. His backup is his FX Impact tuned by AZ shooting a variety of slugs. Mark is shooting a Wildcat Mk1 .25 using JSB Hades at 925fps and glassing dogs with his Athlon Argos with his backup being a Taipan .25 Standard. I am shooting my .25 Cricket with a Georgia Airguns power tune slinging JSB Kings @ 1050fps with a Athlon Argos mounted on top. The Taipan Veteran Compact In .25 is my backup.
We continue to learn something every year we go on our prairie dog hunt. The very first year I hunted, I could hear ‘em but couldn’t see ‘em. I learned you had to be well camo’d and be patience. A quality range finder is a must and you really need to know your holdovers (or clicks if you’re a clicker)at distances you and your gun are capable of shooting.
If you’ve not hunted prairie dogs, one of the things they do is, they will just put their eyes just above their mound and “yip” alerting other dogs. Sometimes they won’t alert. They will just watch you. With heads about 2-3” in size, at distances beyond 50-75 yards, particularly in windy conditions, can be a challenge.
We also would go out into the middle of the field and just sit and wait scanning the mounds. They got used to us being there after 30 minutes of waiting. Occasionally, a few would pop up behind us only to be shot at.
Here is a collage of a few dogs that wondered out of the safety of their burrows only to not make it back.
We arrived in Colorado this evening. Weather is promising. Small chance of rain but no incessantly wind.
I’ll be doing a follow up report this week.