A weekend of hunting (a tad long and lotsa pics)

kombi1976

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A little while back Peter, a friend from Sydney, and I hunted a big property about 60 miles north of town and we had a good time bagging feral goats there.
We intended to go back last weekend but other people were hunting there and so I decided he could stay with me instead and and we'd try the local properties I hunt that are all between 10 and 20 miles from town.
The week before didn't bode well.
I got a pretty severe shoulder injury and spent the Monday and Tuesday off work.
I recovered midweek but it was back with a vengeance by Friday when Peter was due to arrive.
I could've wimped out but he was driving the 2 hours from Sydney and I decided I'd grit my teeth.
Our Friday night hunt started about 9pm when we headed for a property southwest of town owned by a colleague of mine.
Unfortunately the wind was howling and light mizzle fell most of the time but I did whack one rabbit with my .25-20 Martini Cadet and Peter thumped a pair of crows with a single round from his BRNO .22lr.
There was other game about, like a pair of hares, but due to Peter's unfamiliarity with my rifles and the weather we just weren't lucky so we called it a night about midnight.

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My bunny taken with a Hornady 75gr HP from the 25-20 Martini.

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A pair of ex-crows thanks to Peter's BRNO.
And I was pretty pleased to be home too.
Peter's Land Rover Discovery has coil springs but my back and shoulder were pretty painful by the end.
A long sleep-in was supposed to cure my shoulder but it didn't.
After some messing about and a visit to the penny grabbing local gun shop where the owner tried to sell Peter some stock standard Federal Power Shok '06 ammo for $37:)mad:!!) we headed out to a big property about 20 miles southwest of town.
This property is about 1000 acres and the game tends to be rabbits and hares although the owner had some tags this time so we were also open to cull a few roos.
Upon arriving at the place I knew there would be rabbits in the yards by the house and we took 2 there.
We then headed for the far end of the property but little was to be seen.
Peter did however take yet another crow, this time at 110yds with my 25-20 Cadet.
From there we saw little until the sun set and we got out the spotlight.
There were TONS of rabbits in different spots and Peter took another by the sheds before knocking over 2 hares.
He then took the spotlight and I took over shooting duties taking down a hare for myself.
Knowing we were close to the top of the property and areas roos frequent we went up into the timber there and they were grazing there as I had expected.
Peter got a chance to knock over a nice female with his new Tikka T3 Hunter 30-06 using a Federal PowerShok 150gr factory load.
I'd also counted on taking some roos and perhaps was a little overgunned.....but hey, just adds to the fun.
I knocked over 2 big males with my T3 Lite Stainless in 9.3x62 and it was "Goodnight, Nurse" for them both.
I have to say shooting that rifle just makes me feel good all over, well, except when I shoot it off the bench. :(
From there I took another rabbit and hare and one more rabbit in the house yards on the way out.
Again, my shoulder and back were pleased to head home.
Here are some pics:

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Our first bunny taken and the first game I've ever taken using my 1910 Remington Mod 6 "boys rifle", iron sights and all!

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Peter with the crow he sent to that big fence post in the sky.

Here's a rough panorama I made up from a few shots to show the terrain:
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Peter and one of his hares.

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Myself and my hare......yep, that's a LOT of blood and some came home on my jeans. :(

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Peter's female roo taken with the T3 30-06.

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Myself and the T3 Lite Stainless 9.3x62 with the big male roos........a 270gr Speer Semi-Spitzer tends to dampen the spirits when delivered at 2300fps. :p

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My bunny and the 25-20 Martini Cadet topped with a Weaver K6.

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Hare a'la hollow point.....those 75gr Hornadys really change the colour of your day at close range! :eek:

I slept long on Sunday morning, which is unusual as I'm a regular church goer, but the rest did my injury some good.
After a good lunch of beef stew and mash we headed out to another property about 12 miles from town.
I've had little success here recently and the sign on their front gate that said they had been baiting foxes with 1080 poison sealed any hopes on bagging a redcoat.
We did manage to knock over rabbit and walked around in search of more but in the end all we got to do was some extended periods of wildlife observation - namely kangaroos.
Unfortunately no tags were forthcoming on that place so we could only watch not shoot.
In fact due to the massive numbers I'm beginning to suspect the owners are farming them! :p
Here are few pics:

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The lone bunny taken on Sunday's mostly fruitless hunt.

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As the sun sets Peter sitting in wait with his BRNO in case another rabbit is silly enough to show it's head.

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Some of the huge mobs of roos we saw.....there are 6 in this pic and most of them knew we were watching but apart from the odd curious stare continued to graze.

In the end the weekend was success.
Despite game numbers being down, the weather and my injury we still came away with....
  • 3 crows
  • 6 rabbits
  • 4 hares
  • 3 roos
I must make it back to the big property soon though.
There were so many rabbits and at least another 6 hares we missed.
Additionally Peter, his son, myself and another couple of friends are heading up to the big property we meant to hunt from 5th to 9th January next year.
It should be a cracker of a hunt.......rabbits, hares, foxes, goats and possibly even hogs.
Gotta love hunting! :D
 
Thanks for the pics - great work.

P.S. there's a pet Wallaby loose up here. What round do you recommend for it? Any recipes? ;)
 
Cheers!
Mmmm, now wallabies are mean critters.
Nothing less than a 470 N.E. will do! :D
As far as recipes go season it with garlic and herbs and cook the meat FAST.
Sort of put it in the pan and pull it back out again.
Otherwise it'll only be fit for making saddles. :(
 
Now there is a whole different world of hunting down there. Looks like fun. congrats on some nice shooting.
 
Too bad roos did not have racks!!
:D:D:D:D:D
Man, there's a whole afternoon of PhotoShop fun in that statement! :p
For those interested, roo is pretty gamey and VERY lean, so much so that you cook it very briefly or have to stew it for long periods.
Other wise it quickly becomes rubbery and tough.
It's not a bad feed though.
As for roos being the deer of Oz, not really.
They're a bit to stupid and placid for that and not really big enough, although the males are quite big but only in comparison to a human, not to a decent sized buck.
Remember the legal minimum for any roo is a scoped rifle in .222 Rem using a 55gr pill.
You'd have to be good to take down deer with that time after time.
Mind you I'm less subtle, as the pics show. :D
 
AWESOME kombi.....
thank you for sharing "how it's done'down under'"!
It IS nice to see how others in the world hunt.

Good Luck on your future hunts!
Oh, and by the way, what do you load your x62 with?

Thanks again!
 
Great pics Andy!:dancingbanana:
Glad to see the Remington getting a workout as well as your 9.3!
Oldbadger has not been messing with his Swiss arms lately, but I think he has a moose hunt planned with it next year.
he had a bit of bad luck with it ( busted stock after two rounds!:eek:) but treadeex Canada came through in fine style and shipped another one to him.
They are truly a class act when it cames to service.....
Cat
 
Nice hunt, glad to see our Aussie brothers are keeping the tradition alive.

I got to agree with you about Roo's being dumb, I remember driving out of the outback one ( working on a stacker/reclaimer around Mt. Isa if I remember correctly ) and running into a herd of Roos crossing the road. Well were in a little Holdem Ute and as soon as we clobbered the first one with the roo bar we stopped. Half of the rest of the herd just barreled into the side of the ute anyhow. Sitting there in the dark with the headlights lighting up the road in front of us, hearing the thumps as the roos ran into the side of the ute and rocking away until the herd moved on.

Those rabbits still have that eye diease that the settlers introduced? Or has it finally died out?

KTK
 
What only three roos. How many did you run over with your truck and roo bars. I was there three months and our bus driver got three. Also got to try roo burgers.
 
Interesting wasn't expecting an Australian adventure when I clicked on the thread... :)

Nice change to see what guys do on the other side of the world.

I don't know why but I have always wanted to shoot a kangaroo...

Good story...
 
Thanks for the response, lads.
Part of the reason I originally joined CGN was because you guys have a such a wide range of interesting game to hunt and I enjoyed reading about it.
I also appreciate the fact that there are so many more shooters in Canada and that the huge range of input on various products gave me a really good idea of their effectiveness on game.
So when I write these sort of things I'm just trying to return the favour.

LeRoy, I'm presently shooting 270gr Speer SemiSpitzers with a 56.5gr load of ADI AR2208 (Varget) behind it.
Brass is Lapua and and the primers are CCI Large Rifle.
The load was recommended to me by shooter on a US forum I'm a member and it has been brilliant, further proving how much is to be gained by well run internet forums.

Mt Isa must've been a bit of a culture shock when you first arrived, KTK.
It's still a pretty crazy place.
Any night driving here out in the country really necessitates a roo bar of some kind or else you have to keep to 50 mph to give you time to brake when a mob comes onto the road.
I'm presently chasing an authentic Hurst bar for my '67 VW Panel for that very reason.

Roos aren't as plentiful as they used to be, notso, and to be honest it's a bit like shooting fish in a barrel.
They're a native animal and goodness knows the introduced species do enough damage so we usually stick to them and try and avoid shooting more roos than we need to.
I don't deny taking down the big males is good sport and it also is a safety issue as they can be down right dangerous to farmers and their working dogs but I don't shoot them without tags.
Otherwise there goes my gun licence, all my guns, a 10 yr ban on getting a licence again and criminal conviction for destroying protected species without permission.
As far as hitting with a truck, we were in a Land Rover Discovery which did not have a proper roo bar, just a bull bar that does not cover the lights properly.
Trucks and buses have big nasty bars and don't even stop when they hit them but smaller vehicles can be really knocked around.
I had a 4x4 dual cab like a Chev Colorado and we hit a big male around sunset one night.
It pushed the roo bar back on it's mounts, broke the indicator and whipped around and made a huge mark on the door with the tail.
The roo was dead but the damage was about $2000.
Nope, I avoid hitting them if at all possible.
 
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