My first western hunt

canoetrpr

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My hunting partner and I arrived in the Buffalo, Wy area after a 26 hour drive from the Toronto, Ontario area. Drove straight through the night. Quite the drive but worth it at the end when we arrived to western landscape.



We spent some time glassing antelope from, literally the back porch on the cookhouse on outfitter's ranch we are staying at. Was great to try out the new Swaro spotter and some other goodies on real game.

Nice that we got out here early as we got to see the landscape before the winter blew in today! Temps dropped overnight from 65 degrees to 12! Winds howled at 40 mph overnight



Made for a more difficult than usual hunt as the day before we had seen antelope EVERYWHERE. Today they were all holed up. We drove with our guide up and down the ranches they have leased. Alas for the most part we only saw antelope but on neighbouring ranches.

After lunch our guide spotted some antelope out far in a distance by a creek bed. Spotting scope came in handy here. Hard to understand when you hunt in Ontario but I consider the spotting scope essential doing this type of hunt.

We put a stalk on them. There was a dried up canal that we used for cover; worked perfectly as it kept us out of view.

We first had a shot at around 350 yards and I'm confident to about there but with a 30mph wind we decided less distance was prudent so we kept on our approach and found a shooting spot 220 yards away from them.

Spotted three bucks but the largest just bedded down so we were going to let my buddy take his doe as he is out for a doe hunt only. At the last minute, the buck that was interesting stood up. Waited a bit for a doe behind him to get out of the way.

I calculated a rough 3 MOA hold ; about 6 inches. Elevation was set at 200m on my ballistic turret which = about 220 yards.

Took one shot. He fell to the ground immediately and kicked around for a bit but then got up and ran about 70 yards before he collapsed.

I thought he was completely broad side but turned out he was standing at a bit of an angle. The bullet caught him on his left front shoulder about 1/3 of the way up to the top of the spine and exited at about the end of the lung on the right side.

We found the bullet had destroyed about 1/2 of the heart and the lungs were jello. Really surprised me that a shot through the heart and lungs would still allow him to run 70 yards!



I was shooting a Cooper 52 Jackson Game 280AI with handloaded 140gr Nosler Accubonds behind 61gr of IMR7828SSC with a muzzle velocity just over 3100 fps. Scope is a Swaro Z5 3.5-18x with Ballistic Turret and 4W reticle with holdover marks for wind.



This is only my second big game animal. The shot wasn't exactly where I wanted it to be but I think the angle helped me ensure the vitals were all taken out. Given it was a one shot kill and a very windy day I figure things went relatively well.

Tomorrow we start the doe hunt. My buddy has two doe tags and I have three. We have two more days to go of the hunt and the weather is getting less windy so we hope the goats will be out and about more.

Thanks for all the encouragement over the years folks.
 
Day #2 was less eventful. We saw a few herds just not on the property our outfitter has leased. Tomorrow we are going to a new property our outfitter arranged. They only do archery hunting on that early in the season so the theory is that it will not have had any pressure in the rifle season. Hoping we fill our doe tags.

Late season antelope can be a challenge as we've learned. With a 60+ F degree change in temp suddenly, they have all bundled down.
 
Day #3. My partner and I both shot does today. We had a couple of failed stalks but we were happy to see the success we had.

I was a bit disappointed that my shot placement wasn't quite what it has been at range but I spined the doe and did anchor her in one shot; so it could have been much worse. I'm more motivated than ever to put in even more practice time from field positions at the range. Prone is the only field position that is easily accessible at my range so western hunting suits me well and I'm really enjoying prone.
 
You touch on an important point, can't remember the last time I shot from a bench. Not entirely true, I benched a couple rifles last year to see what they can do. Practice however is always standing, a pack, sticks, etc.

If hunting is your focus, the bench is a wonderful spot to place ammunition while you shoot.
 
Yep- too many hunters want to shoot iddy biddy groups with their big rifle an set up on a bench...... say it shoots 2 inch group at 400.

all good an well til your 300m from an animal an theres no bench within 300 kms... oooopppps


Congrats on the Does.

WL
 
Hunt should have been done on day 3 but the outfitter decided we could stay an extra day and hunt for a very nominal fee just to cover lodging. These guys are top notch. The outfitter is Big Horn Outfitters in Buffalo, Wy.

Both my partner and I shot does today. Mind was at 325y. One shot took her down and I had to take another to finish her off. The first was just a bit back; a liver shot. Second was right in the lungs. I over compensated and placed the crosshairs a bit to far back as my last two animals were shot few inches forward of where I placed them. Really should have treated every shot as a new one instead of trying to compensate. Lesson learned.

One of the lessons I have taken is I am not quite a good shot as I thought I was in the field shooting a live target. I practiced prone quite a bit at the range and was confident out to 300 m (330 y). I'd love to say I had three one shot kills but alas two of them took two shots each. Over the coming year I will spend much more time shooting prone and sitting.

It could have been much worse I guess; in both cases the animal was brought down on the first shot and was killed immediately after. I'm probably being a bit hard on myself as a new hunter.
 
You touch on an important point, can't remember the last time I shot from a bench. Not entirely true, I benched a couple rifles last year to see what they can do. Practice however is always standing, a pack, sticks, etc.

Even a single stick like a walking stick, can make a huge difference in stability, and thus accuracy.

I bought a collapsible bipod that extends long enough to shoot off when standing, but mainly use it when sitting. It's a little less easy to set up and a little less flexible in use, than a simple walking stick.

Bench shooting is about useful for sighting in, but does not help you much when you don't have one to sit at.

Great hunt!

Cheers
Trev
 
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