Leapfrogging
As
farming operations and urban development encroach on prime rabbit
hunting areas, large contiguous blocks of hunting territory are harder
to find. This has caused many rabbit hunters to abandon the traditional method of hunting all day in one large swath of brushy territory.
Instead, many now opt for "leapfrogging," where hunters cover one brush
patch or overgrown fencerow in an hour or so, then drive on to another
rabbit hideout. By leapfrogging throughout the day, hunting first one
spot then another, chances are good you'll locate more rabbits.
Farm help
Savvy
rabbit hunters know that farmers are an invaluable aid for finding
cottontail concentrations. Since they work their land daily and see
rabbits regularly, farmers know where huntable populations are likely to
be. Most are eager to keep cottontails thinned out so they don't cause crop damage.
It's a simple matter to cultivate your own contacts in farm country. Remember
these things. Ask permission before hunting, every time you visit.
Follow all rules the landowner asks you to abide by, like passing up
shots at the coveys of quail he's nurturing. Leave everything just as
you found it, and always take time to thank the farmer personally. Offer
to share your game, and follow up with a thank-you note and a token of
your appreciation. Make these easy-to-follow guidelines part of all your farm visits, and you'll always have prime rabbit lands on which to hunt.
Sunrise and sunset scouting
Driving
rural roads near dawn and dusk is another good way to find potential
hunting sites. Cottontails are most active early and late in the day,
especially along the fringes of fields and roadside cover, where briars
and thickets provide sanctuary near favorite feeding areas.
Drive slowly, and note any spot where you see several cottontails. Then inquire at nearby homes for the name of the landowner so you can request permission to hunt.
Dress for success
Most
good cottontail thickets have one thing in common -- thorns. Whether
you're hunting behind dogs, kicking up rabbits yourself or retrieving
downed game, some type of sticker will be clawing at your ears, fingers,
thighs and other tender parts. Wearing protective clothing can do wonders to make your trips afield more enjoyable and less painful.
Blue jeans are preferred by many rabbit fans, but offer little protection. A
good pair of briar-busting breeches with thorn-proof material covering
the front should be considered essential equipment no matter where and
how you hunt. It
also helps to wear a briar-resistant hunting coat, gloves and some type
of hunting cap with flaps that can be pulled down over your ears.
Remember the orange rhino
A buddy of mine often describes
dense rabbit cover by saying, "You couldn't see a blaze orange rhino in
there." In some locales we hunt, this is darn near true. Cover is so
thick, you can only see a few feet. For this reason, we wear hunter
orange hats and bodywear on every trip.
Safety
should be the foremost consideration on all your rabbit hunts. Remember
the orange rhino, and make hunter orange clothing a must for everyone
in your party.
Barrels and bullets
When stomping for cottontails in thick cover, use a shotgun with an improved cylinder choke and No. 6 or 7-1/2 shotshells.
Since cottontails jumped in thick cover usually are close and moving
fast, a wide, yet sufficiently heavy, shot pattern is needed to put a
rabbit down without excessive damage to the meat.
When hunting cottontails with beagles, you may want to switch to a modified or full choke.
A pack of dogs will push rabbits across fields and woodlots, and the
shots you'll make are usually farther than those presented when you
flush rabbits yourself. Use the tighter patterning choke and increase your shot size to No. 4s or 6s.
Icy weather equals hot hunting
Cold,
miserable days often provide the best gunning. Rabbit fur has poor
insulating qualities, so rabbits are forced to take shelter from the
weather, making them easier to find and less likely to flush wildly.
To find bad-weather bunnies, think like a rabbit. Where would you go to escape the cold if all you had to wear was a light jacket? Hunt
places that are sheltered from wind and open to warm rays of sunshine,
then move to other locales offering protection from adverse conditions.
Look 'em in the eye
Stalking
rabbits as they sit in their forms is great sport, especially when
hunting with youngsters not yet adept at bagging running rabbits. The
trick is to spot the rabbit before it spots you. Considering the
rabbit's superb camouflage, this can be tough.
Old
hands at this endeavor have a rule: look for their eyes instead of
their whole bodies. A rabbit's round, dark eyes look out of place
against the crisscross of cover, and are easily spotted by a hunter who
walks slowly, carefully examining all brush and weeds. You may overlook
rabbits huddled in their forms, but you'll also bag a few at close range
after spotting the eye.
Watch over your shoulder
In isolated patches of cover, a cottontail may head directly away, disappearing from sight, then circle well behind the hunter. Others sit tight until the gunner passes, then squirt out behind.
Look
over your shoulder every few minutes, and you'll glimpse some of these
renegades before they make good their escape. Snap shooting is a must,
so be careful to identify your target before shooting.
top-and-go hunting
A veteran nimrod taught me a rabbit hunting technique that has proven very effective over the years.
It's based on the idea that rabbits are highly nervous animals, and
suspense is something they can't handle very well. It works this way.
Enter a covert and begin walking very slowly. Walk ten paces, then stop
for at least a minute, then repeat the process. The
sound of the approach is sometimes enough to make cottontails flush,
but it's just as often the silent period. Apparently, the rabbits think
they've been detected and decide to make a run for it.
Woodland rabbits
Most hunters think of thickets and field edges as the places to go for a rabbit race. Some fail to realize woods harbor rabbits, too. Look for cottontails and swamp rabbits in brushpiles, honeysuckle patches, fallen treetops, cane brakes and other forest cover. Because such areas usually receive less hunting pressure, they often hide extraordinary numbers of rabbits.
Take a kid hunting
To
get the most out of your next rabbit hunt, take a kid with you -- a
son, a daughter, a niece, a nephew, a grandchild or maybe a neighbor's
child. It was in the cottontail fields most of us were trained as young
hunters. We may
have dreamed of deer or more exotic game like grizzlies and lions, but
with cottontails, we learned the crucial basics about hunting, nature
and ourselves.
Share
these things with children. Share the fun and excitement, the triumphs
and disappointments, the barrage of wonderful sensations experienced on a
rabbit hunt. Our heritage of hunting is a priceless treasure. Do your part to pass it on.
Source : http://www.basspro.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/CFPage?catalogId=10001&langId=-1&mode=article&objectID=28528&storeId=10151