Ramblings and Such From Hunting Coyote

Looks like we got 10-12" total. It does not compare to other areas but 10" in Florida I think is equivalent to 3ft in Montana. Just make me want to head up @windypants way still. It was wonderfully quiet this morning nothing but the rooster crowing
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I said this on another thread but outside the tough challenges of this storm down there, I can't help but think how cool it is that alot of folks young and old are seeing and getting to play in the snow for the 1st and maybe their only time in thier lives. I can only imagine the screaming kids running around on a SNOW DAY in the deep south lol! Things most of us take for granted really.
 
That's amazing, Buck! And we are getting that 3' here. Blizzard conditions today, a reprieve tomorrow and another storm coming Friday. Me, the snow shovel, the snowblower and the skid steer are all getting a workout! The deer are just wandering around looking bewildered.
 

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Buck; that's pretty interesting. I have seen some deer with abscesses caused by being shot. I was going to help a guy cut up his nice mule deer buck. He had never even seen one field dressed, when I started showing him how to skin it the hind quarters were full of abscesses from a shot gun wound and the lesson ended there. I was out checking coyote sets one time and found the remains of a deer with an arrow sticking out of him, it's hard to track them here for some people and under some conditions. He was pretty lucky that his intestines didn't get infected or fall out and get exposed to the air. Animals have a lot of drive to keep living, don't they? How is your weather down there? I am sure glad that we haven't gotten the deep snows that Windypants has I like to get ours latter in the spring when the ground isn't frozen, and the moisture will soak in as it melts. We do need the snow build up in the mountains for the water reserve.
 
There was no abscess all looked normal except part of the intestines were outside the gut area. It had lined it with a web of fat and the skin had total healed over. They have an amazing will to live. Today was the second sunny day in 40's and all the snow is gone except a couple small spots in the shade. It has been 20's at night. The animals really had not moved much even with the rut happening until today. Today the squirrels and birds were everywhere feeding and going about their normal day. I went hunting with my dad and just enjoyed the afternoon with him. I think I got more excited about him shooting the deer than he did. It was a great afternoon. My brother hunts a few miles away sometimes on another farm. The car in front of him hit a deer on the way home and game Warden give him a confirmation number so he could pick it up, so we had two deer to clean

Thanks

Buck
 
For me it doesn't matter if we are just setting and having a cup of coffee time spent with family is time well spent. I don't always talk much it's just the way I'm built spent a lot of time by myself even when I was young. A friend of mine was out haying with her dad and at lunch time they were setting in the edge of an Aspen patch, after a while he turned to her and asked her do you ever just set and listen to what the quakeees have to tell you. It hurt her feelings, but she got okay with it when I told her he wasn't telling you to be quiet he was just wondering if you heard what the world had to say. Ben's been gone for 25 years now, and Vonnie has been gone for five years now. I was blessed to have known both of them. I bought a Ruger American chambered in 6.5 Creedmoor last year or so ago. I had some problems with the stock, so I took the plastic stock off and made it a bit less flexible, with an aluminum rod and some bedding compound. I figured out some loads for it and it's been doing good but me being who I am and always curious, I ordered a nice laminate stock from Boyds. It came with bedding blocks, a plastic trigger guard, new screws and a bedding kit. The front block was easy to bed the back one wasn't really bad, but the stock wasn't notched as much as the front lug was. So, I cleaned the block and action put a couple of small drops of super glue on the vee in the bedding block used one of the old action screws and some washers to glue it to the action, after the glue set up, I removed the screw and put the bedding material in the stock then bedded it in the stock. I put two layers of 100 mph tape (duct tape) on the barrel so when the bedding material setup the barrel was centered in the stock and free floating. It really didn't need a new stock after I stiffened up the factory stock, but I just really like to putter with things and am fond of wooden stocks, I got it for a good price to play with it and see what it was like, the grandson will like it when I'm done with it, like my dogs Walt and Bella I tend to spoil him .
 
The inletting of the stock was enough that it allowed room for the bedding blocks to be bedded with close to 1/16" on the bottom between the blocks and the stock. When the blocks were in the stock, they fit loosely the front one would fall out of the stock when I turned the stock upside down. But the back one stayed in the stock. If I pushed the bedding blocks down in the stock all of the way to the inletting the action rested on the wood of the stock instead of the bedding blocks. In the factory plastic stock, the front bedding block did all of the work and the back bedding block was about 1/16" inch too low so that the action rocked up and down or was put in a stressed position if the rear action screw was tightened to the 35 lb of torque, till I bedded the rear of the action as I couldn't take that block out of the plastic stock. By glueing the bedding blocks to the action then using bedding compound in the stock and bedding the bedding blocks in the stock, and using the duct tape to level the barrel and action till the bedding compound cured it gave me a rock-solid bedding surface for the action, but then I'm a lot anal that way I like two ounces of prevention just in case so I don't have to try and figure out what is causing me a problem.
 
The inletting of the stock was enough that it allowed room for the bedding blocks to be bedded with close to 1/16" on the bottom between the blocks and the stock. When the blocks were in the stock, they fit loosely the front one would fall out of the stock when I turned the stock upside down. But the back one stayed in the stock. If I pushed the bedding blocks down in the stock all of the way to the inletting the action rested on the wood of the stock instead of the bedding blocks. In the factory plastic stock, the front bedding block did all of the work and the back bedding block was about 1/16" inch too low so that the action rocked up and down or was put in a stressed position if the rear action screw was tightened to the 35 lb of torque, till I bedded the rear of the action as I couldn't take that block out of the plastic stock. By glueing the bedding blocks to the action then using bedding compound in the stock and bedding the bedding blocks in the stock, and using the duct tape to level the barrel and action till the bedding compound cured it gave me a rock-solid bedding surface for the action, but then I'm a lot anal that way I like two
 
I should have taken pictures of the stock and the parts that came with it. The bedding blocks and trigger guard came in a plastic bag separate from the stock with the bedding material to bed them in the stock. As always, I am impressed with the Boyds stock as with all of the other stocks that I have boughten over the years, there is some small amounts of things that need to be fitted to the individual action and barrels, but nearly all of the different stocks have almost been true drop in fits that just required a small amount of material removal or bedding some parts for the stock to action fit that I want. I have some factory stocks on some of my rifles and I didn't leave them as came they are all bedded and most of them have been pillar bedded, and in reality, it's just because that's what I preferer. I got a well-used Ruger M-77 MKII from a guy that used it as his truck gun. He said that it always shot the first cold bore round well but the second and third rounds wandered off. It had a slim barrel. I took it out of the stock and hot blued it and got the action working and looking good again then went to work on the stock, I bedded the action with pillars then I put a pad in the front of the stock for the thin barrel to rest on so that it came to rest in the same place every shot. I stripped the finish and made a cheek rest out of walnut and purple heart on it then refinished it, as a truck gun the first round is the round that counts but I wanted it to shoot better on the following rounds and to fit and feel better to my body shape and size. I can now hit five out of five clays set up on the range at two hundred yards. That rifle did need to have some work done to the stock but for the most part and the average person it would have been just fine as a one-shot truck rifle for the fox, coyote, or prairie dog or the one-shot calling rifle but for the guy wanting to shoot multiple rounds it wasn't okay.
 
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