ISOutdoors | February 2016

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ISOutdoors enjoying the outdoors and sharing it with you

February 2016

Calling Wolves www.isoutdoors.com




February 2016

CONTENT quaIl huntIng IS StIll kIng CALLING WOLVES TO THEIR DEMISE wInter Sauna-Style fIShIng cold weather coyote huntIng

COLUMNS WUAIL HUNTING WOLVES COYOTE HUNTING WINTER FISHING

publisher Brock RAY

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Quail Hunting Is Still

King

“While not as plentiful as they were 50 years ago, the bobwhite is still royalty.� by Brock Ray


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There was a time, not so long ago, when hunting in the South meant gunning for bobwhite quail. States such as Georgia, South Carolina, and Mississippi were packed with these upland game birds. Virtually every hunter in the South had a shorthaired English pointer or an English setter. Shot shells packed with number seven loads arrived in Dixie by the boxcar loads. Getting up a dozen coveys late in the season was commonplace, and fried quail and grits for supper was pretty much a dietary staple. www.isoutdoors.com

Over the last four decades, land use changes from small family farms to large, roll-crop cultivation and pine tree farms has adversely affected quail habitat. While the jury is still out on the impact of restored whitetail herd and wild turkey flocks, many hunters and wildlife managers point to these rebirth of these animals in large numbers as having a negative impact. Other hunters (and even a few wildlife managers) blame the overabundance of hawks and the demise of trapping as being partly respon


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ISOutdoors tail-hunting lodges and pine-growing plantations.

deliver faster flying, less domesticated quail. Quail houses modeled on structures developed for raising chickens and turkeys have been largely replaced by “flight pens,” where captive quail can fly up to 100 feet. Human contact with birds is far more restricted than in the old days, and selective breeding for faster, wilder birds became part of the program. The result is liberated quail that can offer a challenging hunt at most preserves.

When you consider how easy it is now, not having to train and care for dogs year-round that are only needed for a handful of hunts, and having someone else pluck and clean your birds,

Improving the Quality of the Hunt It is said that necessity is the mother of invention, and this proved to be true concerning the quality of the birds released for wingshooters at these privately owned hunting areas. Packaging half-day and one-day hunts, where gunners paid for the use of dogs, services of a dog handler, and “X” number of quail became a booming business from October through February throughout the South. And, of course, the better the hunting experience offered by a lodge, the more hunters wanted to go there and the more the lodge could charge their quail hunts.

well, perhaps these are the good old days.

Demand for “wilder” birds prompted the owners of quail farms to seek ways to www.isoutdoors.com

The Dog Equation Dogs are a vital part of the quail hunting experience. When my Dad hunted wild quail, he and his brothers and pals all had a couple of bird dogs, some good and some questionable. In those days, there were enough wild birds that most pups could be run in fields with



ISOutdoors older dogs, where they would hit upon enough birds to eventually refine their quail-hunting skills. Perhaps the biggest downturn in modern quail hunting in the South has been the scarcity of wild birds, which has made the training of consistent bird dog behavior difficult to impossible. Many preserves allow hunters to bring their own dogs. In my experience, this is not always a good idea. If the dogs are not regularly hunted, they end up taxing the patience of their owners and sometimes providing unexpected comic relief. I, and most other shooters going to a preserve, prefer to use the lodge’s dogs. These canines see action several times a week and are generally well trained. A big part of the hunting experience is watching a brace of experienced setters or pointers do what these breeds were created to do. For casual wingshooters like me, who love to hunt at least a couple of times a year, the availability of well-trained dogs at the lodges is a true Godsend. I wish I had time to train up a decent quail-hunting dog, but I do not have that luxury. Preserves offer “turn key� hunting for those on the road or www.isoutdoors.com

with too little time to go it on their own. The Cost and the Perks Lodges charge between $75 to $250 per half/full day of shooting. While some preserves only offer gunning for quail, others offer ringneck pheasant and chukar hunting, as well. The latter is especially common at the farther north payto-shoot upland game bird locations. Preserve, or estate-style shooting as it is now being called, began in the South, but is now available as far north as the Dakotas, where quail are not found under natural conditions. On the go professionals like the fact that nearly all bird shooting preserves have loaner shotguns, shot shells, and hunting vests available. Most preserves dress birds and, before you leave, present them to you inside a Styrofoam cooler full of ice so you can get them home hassle free. When you consider how easy it is now, not having to train and care for dogs year-round that are only needed for a handful of hunts, and having someone else pluck and clean your birds, well, perhaps these are the good old days.



Fishing Yellowtail in La Bocana

Before we talk about the fishing, I would like to first tell you about this fantastic fishing village. This is a group of fishermen, a co-op that govern themselves. There is no government interference, no government policing, everything is done by themselves. For example, everyone has a job. You want to fish? The co-op buys your boat, your motor, your gasoline, everything that allows you to work. And you sell your fish directly to the co-op and they pay you for it. Therefore, you have actually no expense whatsoever. The only thing you do is work. If your boat breaks down, it is fixed by the co-op, if you need a new motor a new motor is given to you. So it is a perfect situation. Now these people have different sections. You can’t be a fisherman and work the lobster. You have to be a fisherman, a lobster fisherman, or abalone. It is broken down in three sections. The only way you can get in is if someone leaves so they have a certain number of each type of fishing which controls it and makes it so it isn’t over fished. Some people have been waiting 8 years to get in waiting on someone to retire or pass away. That’s the only way you can get in. There are no new jobs. However, you can get a job in there cannery factory. They actually can fish, abalone, snails and yellowtail. So it’s a complete situation-it is incredible how it works and everyone there, believe it or not, is happy. Now how does it all work. They have elections where they have a president which would be like the Mayor, they have treasures, they have supervisors. It is like a government within a government. It works. Here’s another great thing that happens there. Say you have a problem where you children takes to drugs, which isn’t normal but does happen like anywhere else in the world. These children are taken from the family and put into rehab. This co-op goes in and helps this family out and fixes it. Say a fisherman becomes an alcoholic. As soon as a red flag is up, he is taken into a rehab to keep their life in order. Or sickness. Someone in the family gets sick, they have transportation, even air transportation to take them to a hospital and they are taken care of. It is a perfect situation. It is incredible to see all these people work. It is almost like an ant colony. Everyone has their job and everyone does their job. They all work together and strive for one thing- to live comfortably. Schooling.They have schooling for the kids up to high school. After high school, they take the kids and put them in the universities all paid for by the co-op. Everything is paid insurance, life insurance, health insurance. The people live in basically the same style house, very nice homes for fishermen. Almost 90% of all the fishermen drive new trucks. They have family vehicles and they have their work vehicles to take their boats. This is a perfect government, a perfect place. If you want to leave, you can leave. You are not tied down. Everyone works together to achieve a happy life. In

the day of holidays for example, the 16th of September they close the town down. All the food, drinks and everything is free, the co-op buys it all. They bring in live music, the main streets are shut down and everyone dances in the street and the public is welcome outside the co-op to go you don’t have to worry about problems it is so safe. It really is incredible what they have done. There are several towns like this in Mexico which we will talk about another time. But I wanted to talk about this wonderful town La Bocana. It is 9 hours north of La Paz on the Pacific side and it is well worth going to visit. Now let’s go into our adventure. Well, we caught a lot of calico grouper and filmed a couple of shows and now we decide lets go

after the big sheephead. The sheephead for me are a beautiful fish. They have a black head, then red with white and then black and then red. They almost look like a coral snake color and the colors of the males are so brilliant, they are so beautiful. The females are kind of dull, kind of brownish, you can see the different shades but not beautiful like the male. So we go fishing for them and we don’t have a lot of luck. We caught three of them and they were all female so we didn’t really get the show I wanted with the sheephead. We look at each other and we know what’s happening about ten minutes away was the yellowtail. We all smile and know what needs to be done, so we take off and head for the yellowtail. We aren’t getting


UNTIL THE NEXT ADVENTURE WITH THE GRIZ! bored, but it is so easy to keep catching 45-50 lb yellowtail so we decide to go down to light tackle. I mean bass tackle, we’re fishing like we’re going for calico bass and we’re bringing them in, and we’re fighting and the rods doubled over and I can say one thing that Eagle Claw blue rod sure can handle big fish. But I get one about 65 lbs and I decide to horse a little bit more and snap! I broke the rod. But we still got him in. I shouldn’t have been horsing him especially on such a light rod. But if you want to have an experience, this is the place to go. You’ve got the best fishing, the best yellowtail fishing I’ve ever seen in my life, and the other thing is the estuaries. Some of the best estuary fishing where you catch leopard groupers, you catch halibut, and its crystal clear. You can even see the octopus because these guys are governing their own waters and they are doing a fantastic job. It is incredible without government what they have done for fishing. I think all of us need to learn a lesson from them. They look at the fishing for fun, but most of all a way of life. So let’s get our heads out of our ‘you know what’s’ and let these people show us a thing or two. It is well worth it. Remember if you want to follow us go to my Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and of course our website www. ASOBonline.com. And remember the sun is hot, so use the Griz Gators. Don’t be saying “I wish I’d have done that” when it is too late. Check out our gear at www.TheGrizGear.com


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winter SaunaStyle fishing “The colder the better for fishing hot water discharge areas� by Don Kirk


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Cold winter weather cools fishing in most places. Among a handful of exceptions to this general rule is ice fishing in Green Bay, Wisconsin, and fishing the hot water discharge areas of the country¹s many coal and nuclear power plants. Nearby water temperatures hovering from the mid-50 degrees to just above the freezing mark affect fishing by making most game fish,such as bass, crappie and catfish,torpid; requiring less food because they are less active. When water is discharged by thermoelectric power plants into a local waterway, the temperature of the downstream recipient waters becomes considerably warmer. This www.isoutdoors.com

predominantly occurs in rivers. Coldwater sensitive forage fish, such as threadfin shad, will concentrate in these warmer waters. An abundance of concentrated food in a markedly more comfortable environment translates to out-of-the-ordinary fishing in these artificially-created “hot spots.” Here¹s how it works. In a steam power plant, coal (or oil or gas) is burned and the hot combustion gas is used to produce superheated steam in a boiler. The superheated steam is expanded through a steam turbine, providing power to drive a generator. Steam power plant cycles are characterized by the pressure level at which they are



ISOutdoors operated. Subcritical cycles use pressures below the critical pressure of water, while supercritical cycles operate above the critical pressure, providing higher efficiency. (Golly Sergeant Carter, Sheriff Taylor and I just want to catch a few fish, not become engineers.) Well, having explained how the water is heated and used, at some point it departs its turbine-turning tasks to return the river from which it was collected. There are two general rules that apply to fishing these areas. One is that the closer you are to where the hot water enters a river, the warmer it will be. The fish will not be in these hot water zones, but they will be nearby. The other general rule is the weather. The colder it is, the more electricity people will need to heat their homes, and the higher the electrical demand, the harder the boilers are pushed at these power plants. In other words, the colder the weather, the greater the amount of hot water discharged into downstream rivers. This is particularly important news those who never have enough time to find out where the fish are biting. Everyone reading this article lives near at least www.isoutdoors.com

one or two coal and/or nuclear powered thermoelectricity plants. The Tennessee Valley Authority alone operates almost two dozen coal and a handful of nuclear plants in the Tennessee River valley. No matter where in the country you live, you are rarely more than an hourยนs drive from one of these plants. Playing the Odds This is not to say good cold weather fishing is not available where you like to fish at your favorite lake, even without hotspots. Those crappie you want to catch may be 30 feet deep on a rainy day, but on a sunny afternoon could be only a few feet deep on mud flats. All you need to catch a meal of crappie is cooperative weather and to be lucky enough to locate that .05 percent of the lake they are in when you want to find them. Donยนt like those odds?Wellm steam plant discharge areas are as close to a sure thing as winter season angling offers, especially if you like mixed bag fishing. Bait and game fish instinctively go where food is most available and temperatures are the most comfortable. That is why



ISOutdoors walleye go 40 feet deep in July — they seek to escape hot surface temperatures for more comfortable cool water at such depths. This is why rainbow trout are not in Florida, where lake temperatures soar into the high 80-degree range, and largemouth bass are not found in Alaska where “hot” water in August is 50 degrees. All species of game fish have preferred water temperatures. Carp, largemouth bass, bluegill, and catfish prefer warmer water than pike, striped bass, walleye sauger, and trout. Having said this, all of the above can often be caught in a single mile downstream from a discharge canal, as they congregate around the warm water like it is their own personal sauna. How to Catch ‘Em Catching virtually any game fish at one of these hot spots is pretty simple. Drifting a minnow or cut-bait in the current a couple of feet beneath a bobber is easy to do, and tough to top. You will quickly notice where the bigger fish are stacked up. Usually, it is the transition zone between the warmed water and the colder, naturally occurring water. The www.isoutdoors.com

further downstream you fish from the mouth of the discharge canal, the wider the area of good fishing is before it ends. You can usually determine that point by the well-worn trails leading to these popular cold-weather fishing spots. Crankbaits, spinnerbaits, grubs, and plastic worms are all effective, too. The best all-round approach is to cast upstream at about one o¹clock, retrieving your lure through the current. A fairly brisk retrieval usually works well, although at other times slow turning works. Strikes are usually fast and aggressive, especially in comparison to the mealy-mouth strikes anglers usually get when cold weather fishing. Additionally, catching a bass might be followed by catching a striper, followed by a catfish, and then a sauger. These discharge areas are equal-opportunity zones for all game fish in the waters where you are fishing. Take time to pinpoint a couple of these winter-season fishing hot spots, so you can unwind on your next downtime.



Cold Weather C


Coyote Hunting “No quarry requires less preparation to hunt than the wily coyote.” by Buck Wilder


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February is the hottest month of the year for coyote hunting. Those who hunt these canines agree that the coyote is the most challenging sport hunting around. These miniature wolves are intelligent, wary, cagey, and tough to fool. February¹s freezing weather fuels the already high metabolism of these predators, so they are driven to hunt for prey almost ‘round the clock. This makes the yodie more vulnerable to hunters now than it is at any other time of the year. For time-pressed professionals, it is the perfect spur-of-themoment hunting opportunity. www.isoutdoors.com

Step One Finding a place to hunt for coyotes is step one. You can almost always get solid information on where to hunt by contacting local ranchers, farmers, landowners, and your local wildlife officer ¬and many times you¹ll also get an invitation to come hunt. Property owners are usually eager to have these troublesome animals killed. My favorite place to hunt is abandoned quarries, as they contain great den spots where these animals hang out during


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the day. Other locations that produce well include deer yards, bramble patches that attract rabbits, pastures and fields (especially those bisected by railroad tracks), and the edges of swamp and creek meanders. Rural mail carriers often know where these animals are most likely to found during the day. Call Them In Calling coyotes is easier than most newcomers suspect. Thanks to electronic www.isoutdoors.com

calls, the job can be as easy as flipping on the switch. There are also many handheld and electronic predator calls to choose from. Fox Pro (www.gofoxpro.com), Johnny Stewart Wildlife Calls (www. johnnystewart.com), and Extreme Dimension Game Calls (www. phantomcalls.com) make reliable, effective, inexpensive electronic calls. While the use of hand held mouth-blown


calls is effective, mastering these requires considerable practice. Most experienced coyote hunters start calling at a low volume. Starting out at a high volume will spook closeby yodies. If you donยนt get results after about 10 to 15 minutes of calling, increase the volume slightly. Calling in 5- to 10-second bursts every minute for 5 minutes is a good starting point. Coyotes are unpredictable. They often come charging in soon as you start calling. But at other times, these hunters circle, using their nose to wind the source of the calling. At other times, they stay hidden in cover just out of sight, sizing up the situation for long periods of time before approaching. Sometimes coyotes respond vocally. So even if you donยนt see a yodie, stay put for at least 45 minutes before leaving for another location. Calls that incite coyotes to come see what the racket is about include a dying (or injured) rabbit, a fawn in distress,

wounded crow or woodpecker, and coyote pups in distress. All work well in most areas. Calling success increases if you have visual stimuli to divert the eyes of these animals to the source of the sound. This is accomplished by using decoys that look like rabbits, pups, or birds. Even a feather tethered to a stick on the ground will work. Some predator hunters swear by using a life-sized www.isoutdoors.com


ISOutdoors coyote decoy sprinkled with yodie urine, to make their quarry think an intruder is on their turf. Where and how you set up to call is important. Locate in shadowy spots along the edges of open areas such as fields. Never set up where your outline will be silhouetted against the sky. Travel to and from your set-up site as quietly as possible. Hide in Plain Sight A key component in calling is to remain motionless. Coyotes are extremely adept at detecting movement. Always carry shooting sticks or a bi-pod rifle rest. Personally, I like the flexibility of the shooting sticks. Good camo is important. Matching your surroundings enables you to avoid detection. If you are hunting Texas mesquite and cactus country, brown/ green is the ticket. If you are hunting where snow is prevalent, then of course you need snow pattern camo. I like insulated camo jumpsuits that I put on when I am ready to hunt. I buy them a size larger than my usual clothing, www.isoutdoors.com

so they are easy to get on and off. Do not forget to cover your face as well, and cover your rifle, too. These spooky critters are able to pick up glints of light from a rifle or scope. Inexpensive, But Fun Getting started at coyote hunting does not require you to first spend a lot of money for a high-velocity rifle. Deer rifles in 30.06, .308, .280, .243 and .270 calibers are effective on coyotes. However, if you do a lot of coyote hunting, smaller caliber varmint hunting rifles such as the 22/250, .257, .223 or 221 are choices you may wish to consider. A good scope is recommended, especially for hunting at night. The larger the objective lens, the more light it gathers and the more it costs. My recommendation is to spend as much as you can stand for a quality 3x9 riflescope. Coyote hunting this time of year is a great way to keep your shooting and hunting skills sharp. Reducing coyote numbers helps protect the whitetail and other game animals from these voracious predators, while you are having fun!



Calling Wolves to Their

Demise


Where ever the gray wolf is found they are the apex predator, superseded by none including the grizzly bear and the cougar.




The days were still short when I arrived in Sitka, Alaska where I was greeted by my long time friend, Dale Adams. I had scheduled another brown bear hunt, my third with him as I recall. Again we were aboard Surveyor, his 64-foot boat that can only be described as a scaled down luxury ocean liner. It was to serve as our mobile base camp to which we moored a skiff, which enabled us to set traps for pawns and crab before venturing onto dry land to kill four-legged predators.

Taking a big brown bear was the first order of business and I was lucky. Rather than have to scale the steep mountain sides that bumped right up against the shoreline, we caught a hungry fellow patrolling the shoreline. The beast was moving into the wind as it scavenged along the edge of the water. This enabled us to overtake him from the rear with deadly efficiency. Standing over my prey, I could not help but look up and smile at the steep terrain I did not have scale on


this hunt. It was the easiest brown bear hunt of my life.

Surveyor though, is as Nash Buckingham once penned, “A delicious memory.”

That evening aboard the Surveyor, we dinned on freshly steamed pawns and crab we had collected from Dale’s traps on the way back to his boat. I supposed you would have to dive into the water and eat otter style if you wanted to dine on seafood any fresher than we had that evening. Every meal taken on the

It is not every brown bear hunt where success comes early enough to leave a guide and hunter with time to kill, no pun intended. Every evening after dinner we had lounged on the deck sipping wine and listening to the wolves communicate by howling back and forth around the bay. Prior to the hunt we had discussed


the likelihood of hunting these animals which was why I had brought along my Winchester300 Short Magnum and Winchester ammunition with lightening fast 140 grain bullets. The following morning after we had dumped the pawn and crab traps over the side of the skiff we headed across the placid water of the bay into an inlet made shallow by the low tide. The plan was for Dale to call in the wolves using only his mouth, and not by creating distressed prey calls for luring in these animals, a practice I had used with great success on wolf hunts in British Columbia and Alberta. I was quite excited, as like many other modern day hunters, I have developed quite a fascination with hunting wolves. Wolf interaction with man goes back as far as time itself. The stuff of nursery rhymes and scary movies, these large canine predators are as etched into our psychic in much the same manner as the Ten Commandments. When it comes to wolves everyone seems to have their own personal opinion about these animals. During the years I ran a

caribou hunting camp in Quebec, I had the honor of coming to know a few of these animals. At my Leaf River camp it was not uncommon for a couple of the local wolves to wander into camp out of curiosity. I do believe that there is a unique relationship between man and wolf, which is evident in the domesticated dog breed we now keep as companions. They all are descendants ofwild wolves taken as pups by man long ago. Wolves are predatory hunters and I too am a hunter. Perhaps there is honor among thieves. The gray wolf of North America is often known simply as the wolf. They are the largest wild member of the Canine



clan which includes a number of other subspecies of wolves as well as foxes, dingo and coyote. Where ever the gray wolf is found they are the apex predator, superseded by none including the grizzly bear and the cougar. Wolves in various forms and sizes are found around the globe, although thanks to man’s contempt with sharing his abode with these animals, in most places wolves are no longer found.

Though once abundant over much of Eurasia and North America, the gray wolf inhabits a very small portion of its former range because of widespread destruction of its habitat, the encroachment of civilization, and widespread human intolerance of these animals. Even so, the gray wolf is regarded as being of least concern for extinction, and thanks to their reintroduction in the Rocky Mountains, their numbers have exploded and they now are numerous enough in Minnesota


to permit hunting for these animals. In recent years a growing number of outfitters in Canada and Alaska have begun to offer wolf hunts. While the demand has risen slowly, a growing number of hunters in the US have wanted to pit their skills against what is arguably the continent’s top predators. Similarly, the combination of expanding wolf numbers in many prime big game hunting areas has resulted in a desire on the part of many people to curb their numbers and the impact on elk, moose and other ungulates. For outfitters the dead of winter is their slowest season. Wolf hunts provide income when otherwise there is little opportunity to make money other than trapping. Also known as the timber wolf, in the wild gray wolf live to around 8-to-10 years, and in the north reach weight from 90-to 130-pounds and sometimes even larger. Their coats vary widely in color from grey to brown, from white to jet black. Highly social, gray wolves live in packs which can vary in size from two to over fifteen (and more), but are usually from five to eight wolves formed primarily of

family members and relatives. The pack leader is normally the alpha male. This animal calls the shot on everything from when and where the pack will hunt, to its pecking order and other activities. Maturing male wolves often leave their packs to become lone wolves. Loners may start their own packs if a mate and a vacant area can be won. Wolf packs are move frequently with their astonishingly large territories that can cover almost 300 square miles. As with most predators, North America’s gray wolf usually hunts at night. Pursuit by a pack is a lot like a tag team wrestling match with alternating members of the pack giving close quarters chase and nipping at the hind legs of their prey. While it is true that wolves usually take the weak and old among these game animals, during the high snows of winter packs going on indiscriminate killing rampages of moose and deer are far more common that many so-called wolf experts will publically acknowledge. There are various ways to hunt wolves. These range from government operated pack reduction efforts accomplished by


shooting them from low flying air planes, to the current rage of using prey distress calls to lure wolves before the rifle of a hunter. Dale relied on the instinctual territorial behavior of these animals. Like the local brown bear we had already successfully hunted, wolves from the interior had moved closer to the water to hunt and forage. Such seasonally present packs frequently come into contact and conflict with resident packs of wolves which regard coastal areas as their home range territory. Keenly aware of this spring season behavioral pattern, Dale has developed a technique in which he cups his hands around is mouth to create a megaphone of sorts, through which he uses just his vocal cords to produce the howl of a wolf.

I was a bit skeptical of how this would work on an animal as intelligent as a wolf. As you probably have already concluded though, Dale was quick in teaching me otherwise. Landing the skiff in a marshy inlet off of a bay that was several hundred yards across, we moved by foot around a point that hide the presence of our launch. On the other side of the point we locate in a strip of Yugo sized boulders that butted up against an unbroken wall of dark green firs that rose almost a 100 feet into the air behind us. We glassed the long, distant shoreline for signs of life, but spotted only scattered flocks of gulls. Dale then cupped his mouth and began yowling. I do not claim


to be an expert in the dynamics of wolf vocalizations, but if you are talking in terms of a phone ringing, Dale received an answer on the second ring. An instant later four burly figures emerged from the roughly 200 yards to right.

admit to in print. The big wolf’s response was immediate. It launched into a full run the paralleled the shoreline rather than retreating back into the woods. The bullet’s impact had made the wolf believe that trouble was behind it.

I was thinking that is was going to be pretty pickings. Putting the crosshairs on the biggest of the wolves, I lined up on the shoulder of the animal and squeeze of a round. To my surprise I missed, actually over the top of the animal by more than I would ever dare

I fired a second time, and missed, although that shot was enough to make the fleeing wolf double its speed. By now I created a slender, horizon target that was moving at about 50 mph. Perhaps I should not have shot a third time, but I did. The intersection of the blazing wolf and sizzling bullet created quite a spectacular train wreck. Still laughing aloud at my first two misses, when the fleeing wolf crashed under my third shot, Dale emitted a somber “dang.” Hunting later at a tidal flat much farther up the bay, Dale called in a second recon group of woods. This time I dropped two of the five wolves with none of the fanfare akin to that of taking the first wolf. Wolf hunting will become increasingly popular in the approaching future, but I do not believe you can have this sort of hunt with any outfitter other than DaleAdams.




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