Pest Thwarted

I really try to leave these creatures alone, but this guy got too comfortable stealing my pup’s food. Caught him in the kennel tonight moving the bowl of food as we came back from investigating what was disturbing him earlier. Huben K1 .22 shooting 25.4 grain pellets. Initial shot was maybe 30-35 yards through the chain link fence. Follow ups were about 20 yards out. Shot from kneeling with a simple rifle mounted torch. I unloaded on this fella.
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Don't feel bad. They aren't as beneficial as people think. They don't really control ticks like people claim.
The study that claimed that showed they had the largest amount of ticks in their stomachs compared to raccoons, skunks, etc. That led to the researchers extrapolating how many they would eat over a year based on the sample size from the stomachs of possums.
All the research proved was they were meticulous groomers compared to skunks and raccoons.
They are immune to snake venom and love to eat snakes, so that's something...
 
Don't feel bad. They aren't as beneficial as people think. They don't really control ticks like people claim.
The study that claimed that showed they had the largest amount of ticks in their stomachs compared to raccoons, skunks, etc. That led to the researchers extrapolating how many they would eat over a year based on the sample size from the stomachs of possums.
All the research proved was they were meticulous groomers compared to skunks and raccoons.
They are immune to snake venom and love to eat snakes, so that's something...
@AmosBurton I don’t care about what people think they do with ticks. I deal with my own ticks every year. They aren’t going anywhere. I’m thinking forward. I’ll have to protect my garden. I’ll probably get some hatchlings this spring as well. Also the dog need to understand his job. He’s got the alert thing down, but not so much the chase and kill. I think he’s used to me killing. So I took the opportunity to at least get him familiar with the scent and getting close to the possum. Before he wouldn’t even get close to them. I tried to encourage him a little on the carcass to get him comfortable.

I have learned to like having them around as they’re a part of the clean up crew around here and they’re usually pretty docile and sometimes friendly. I don’t get too friendly with them, but I’m usually no threat. I often just walk past them and they normally don’t run from me. I can usually get very close to them. I just have a thing where I’m not buying and raising food to feed possums. I’d suspected they’d been eating the food. This was the first time I caught one in the act. I’m just glad the pup didn’t run in there before he realized what was going on.
 
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Here’s what I saw as we approached the kennel.
the thing about possums is they freeze involuntarily . you can freeze a possum with a low power bb gun that just bounces off , once frozen you have time to get a pellet gun that will do the trick . when we lived in Oak Park IL i kept a red rider next to the back door , once froze i would walk up and gangland style , dispatch with a C02 pistol .
 
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unloaded is right, you just did the humane thing and finished it off… Definitely uncool when critters get “too comfortable” around the homestead…
@L.Leon In all honesty it wasn’t the most humane in the sense of a timely dispatch. First shot through the fence was a neck shot. ITT went down and I thought it was done. Pup ran over there and when I looked through the thermal again it walked out of the kennel dripping blood from the neck. When the pup didn’t attack it, I called him off to get him out of my line of sight. I’m still working on him discipline with this one. He’s good when he knows I’m target shooting, but because I’m not out here shooting everything moving it’s hard for him to tell when I’m going to shoot an animal outside of squirrel hunting. We see rabbits, raccoons, possums, foxes, deer, horses, armadillos, and an occasional coyote. I’m usually shooting at coyotes and dillos around him. We saw a fox later that night and before I could discern Fox from coyote, he gets in my line of sight and enters a stare down. Turns out it was a fox and I didn’t shoot. Anyhow, after the pup came back to me I shot the possum until it stopped moving. I’m pretty sure it was gone before it stopped moving but I owed it that much to be sure. I emptied the mag with the last two or three shots up close. I don’t like to pretend things aren’t the way that they are so I wanted to clarify that. It was probably a 2-3 minute ordeal. 2-3 minutes is a long time to fight (as humans) and a long time to watch or allow something to die in my eyes. Although Texas hunting regs requires me to let a deer bleed for a half hour before attempting to retrieve it.