Friday, June 29, 2012

Every Hunter's Dream

Katie Lemon shares footage of a hunt that netted her an amazing southern Utah muley....





    "As hunters, we always had a dream: to hunt in Africa..So we did, to make it come true. The experience was wonderful and we kept on returning and returning, so much so that we brought our dream beyond."




    With no more ties left in Spain other than our work, we decided, some time ago to immigrate to South-Africa. We have established an exclusive lodge for hunters and non-hunters. Our personal vision of this project: careful and customized attention to our clients so that they feel right at home. We want them to feel good.. more than good and above all, a place where you can achieve your dreams and goals: to hunt in AFRICA..to feel like an EXPLORER.

    That's why our Lodge is named: THE HUNTER'S DREAM SAFARI - the dream of a hunter! or, in a nutshell, our love affair with Africa!!



Monday, June 25, 2012

Train dogs for hunting

Research the different breeds of water dogs. There are many dogs suitable for hunting waterfowl. Some of the most popular are Labrador Retrievers,Golden Retrievers and Springer Spaniels. Look into the different breeds and decide which one is best for you and your hunting adventures. You should also be mindful of the amount of care a particular breed will need. Some dogs require a lot of room to run, for example, while others are more sedentary. Choose a dog that you can provide a good home for.

Pick out a puppy. Although there are many adult dogs that are trained to hunt waterfowl, it is generally best to train your own puppy. Not only will a puppy allow you the time to train the dog for your hunting style, starting with a puppy will also ensure a loyal dog that is bonded and conditioned to its owner. Make sure you use a reputable breeder; you can research breeders online or at your local dog or hunting clubs. 

Introduce the puppy to water when they are little. Instill the idea that water is good, water is fun, and playing in water is a way to earn rewards and other positive reinforcement. You can start in a small wading pool at first, and in no time your dog will be ready for the open water. 

Teach your dog to sit and stay. Although these are basic and cliché dog commands, they serve as the foundational commands for more complex hunting demands. Use food as a way to teach sitting. Hold food over the dog’s head. Give the command to sit while simultaneously pressing gently on the dog’s hind legs. As soon as the dog sits give it a treat. Repeat this over and over. Soon your dog will sit at the first glance of a treat. Eventually, he or she will sit without requiring a treat.

Introduce your dog to decoys and to the scent of waterfowl. It is important that your dog quickly understand the difference between a real duck and a decoy. You can utilize waterfowl scent and dummies to train your dog. Be sure to set decoys far away from the dog before throwing the dummy so they are able to find out where the dummy is and knows the difference between a real bird and a decoy.

Practice daily, if possible. Make waterfowl training a fun, rewarding experience for your dog. 

Reinforce positive behavior with positive rewards. When you attach a scent to a decoy or training device, throw it in the water, and see your dog fetch the trainer and return it to you, make sure to let your dog know what a good job it has done. There is nothing a dog wants more than to please its owner, and to establish a lifelong hunting partnership it is important to let your dog know from a young age that retrieving game is something he or she will be rewarded for. 

Expose your dog to actual hunting situations before taking it out into the field. A dog that is trained only in theory may not perform to expectations in the field. A dog that is expected to perform around guns needs to be trained in the presence of guns. Take your waterfowl dog with you when you target practice, or set up simulated hunts in a proper shooting area. The key point is that your dog has to be prepared for actual situations if you expect it to perform like a seasoned hunter. Condition your dog prior to the hunt. You want your dog at peak performance in the field. 

Use training dummies early and often. The more you train your dog to the scent and feel of waterfowl, the more your dog will impress you in the field. Remember, a dog’s biggest pleasure is pleasing its owner, so if you show appreciation for good behavior in practice your dog will certainly please you in hunting situations. 

Train your dog in a boat prior to a hunt if boats are going to be used. Load it in and out, and practice retrieving dummies from the boat.

Simplify the training by keeping it simple. Your basic goal is to get your dog to retrieve the bird. In your training program focus on rewarding your dog for retrieving the training dummy. It is in the natural instincts of a retriever to want to go after, retrieve, and return a shot bird. It is the job of the owner to get the dog trained to consistently and methodically do so.
 Source : http://www.wikihow.com/Train-Your-Dog-to-Hunt

Friday, June 22, 2012

Rabbit Hunter Tips

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


Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Norica Dragon

- Caliber: 4,5 m/m.
- Weight: 2,9 Kg.
- Total length: 1160 mm..
- Barrel length: 484 mm.
- Speed: 305 m/s.
- Energy: 22,3 Julies.

- and a chemical nickel plated barrel.
- optional scope.
- automatic safety.
- ventilated recoil pad.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Tips for Whitetail Deer Hunting in the Snow

There is nothing better than deer hunting in the snow. I don't know why but snow adds to the hunting experience like nothing else. Perhaps it is because we revert to children and pretend to be mountain men out to get our supper. Perhaps our evolutionary memory takes over and we realize that crops don't grow in the winter and we need meat to survive. Or perhaps it is just because it makes the deer move and easier to spot, but for some reason I love to hunt deer in the snow.

Fresh snow offers a lot of advantages to hunters. One, deer can be tracked in fresh snow by anyone regardless of experience. If it snowed last night and there are deer tracks, you know they are fresh. While few of us get to deer hunt in the snow often enough to be great trackers, novices can find tracks and make large quick circles in front of the deer to try and get in front of the slowly browsing deer. If you make a circle without finding deer tracks it is likely that the deer have bedded down. Either pick a stand and wait, or move in slowly on a stalk. Fresh snow also makes walking in the woods quieter for those who still hunt and for those coming and going to a stand. Snow also makes it much easier to spot deer moving through woods and fields (except for the albinos who get a rare break as they now blend in well). The one disadvantage of fresh snow is that deer move without making a peep on the soft, new fallen snow.
The absolute best time to deer hunt in relation to snow is before the snow comes. The deer apparently keep and eye of the forecast and will hit the forest's mast and the fields hard before a snow arrives. After the snow falls and the weather clears, deer will usually begin to move again unless it is unusually cold. If you missed hunting the approaching snow storm, be on stand as the sun comes up after the snow and you will be in for a thrill. Deer will be moving to find food that has been buried under the snow and will be easy to spot. Consider hunting from a ridge as the usually well camouflaged deer will now stand out and be easy to see.
So when you see the snow coming, get in the woods. While the best time to hunt is anytime that you can, hunting in the snow offers a productive experience that you won't want to miss!

Source :
http://voices.yahoo.com/tips-whitetail-deer-hunting-snow-2036372.html?cat=11

Beeman P3


Caliber:0.177
Velocity:410 fps
Barrel Length:6.69
Loudness:Medium
Overall Length:9.6
Capacity:1

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Deer Hunting Tips

Don't let the deer know what you are doing.
Here is a rule I hunt by. I never walk if I can drive and I never drive if I can use the binoculars.
Stomping around on foot all over your hunting area is a sure way to let all the game know that you are after them. The best way I have found to check out an area is to sit for a few hours, preferably at dawn and dusk, at an elevated point, such as a hilltop. From there I have a good view over the area. With a pair of high powered binoculars in the range of 10 x 40 or 10x 50, I can observe from far away what the animals are doing without ever letting them know that I am in the area.
If this is not possible I drive around in the car. Cruising the country lanes and back roads spooks game very little, they are more used to see vehicles than people on foot.

Be different and kill a buck.
A good friend of mien has gone hunting for many years, but failed to shoot at anything. He asked me why that might be. In a brief conversation I found out that he does every year the same thing, even placed his tree stand in the same tree.
The only thing that constitutes insanity is to do the same things over and over again but expecting each time a different result. If it is not working what you have been doing then perhaps it is time to change what you are doing and if that means you have to get out of your comfort zone then so be it. It is often not what you do that spells the difference but what you are not doing but should do.

Avoid other hunters, deer do to.
To upon your hunting success and make it a lot more fun, take this advice to heart. First you got to hunt on some place where there are deer. Some hunters I know of hunt on places where there are no deer or very few and far in between. Second I always hunt places where there aren’t many hunters. This to me is the most important aspect. I know most of us hunt on public land, where it seems at times that there are more hunters than game. But even these places have pockets where other hunters do not venture to, for various reasons, mostly because these places are to far away from the car. Over the years I have become somewhat an expert on public land hunting and I always look for the places that other hunters don’t go to and that is where the deer go too. My very first Buck was killed on such a place. Right next to the parking lot in a thick dangle of undergrowth where no sane human being ever would think of going.

Deer calling that will bring the deer to you.
When I talk to hunters about deer calling then many complain that calling does not work for them. As I have often discovered in such conversations. The reasons are.
  1. Calling where there are no deer. The deer need to hear your call to be able to respond to it. Deer are not like elk and turkey which react to prospective calling.
  2. The wrong call at the wrong time of the season. Make sure you use the right call, i.e. A Doe-in-oestrus-bleat won’t work in the early season. A dominant buck grunt in an area where there are no big dominant bucks will scare all the deer out of the area. The same is true for very aggressive antler rattling.
  3. The most common mistake hunters make is simply to call to LOUD. Deer don’t SHOUT at each other, they whisper. A deer hears about 500 times better than a human what sounds quiet to you is deafening to a deer.
  4. And finally use a quality deer call, such as those from Modern Call Products. LLC. These calls come so close to the natural sound that you and more importantly the deer won’t know the difference. But not only are these calls top quality sound and material wise. They are also so small that they fit in the palm of you hand or you can keep them in your mouth with the bowstring pulled for that bleat to stop the buck just long enough to get the arrow into him.

Tree stand height.
Bring a few bow hunters together and get a conversation started about tree stand height and soon you have a very heated debate going. There are those that advocate 20ft. of the ground and even higher tree stand placement. While others are of the opinion that 12ft. to 15 is enough. Well the truth is that the most important aspect to tree stand placement is background cover and being able to get a clean shot at the deer. It is an irrefutable fact that the higher you climb up a tree the more likely you are to run out of both, the background cover and being able to make a good killing shot. That is just plain common sense.

 Hunt more!
To increase your success. Hunt more! Sounds dumb but its the truth. You say you hunt every chance you get when you don't have to work!!! Well that may be true but how much of that time is spent at the camp? Why not spend the middle part of the day in the woods? Staying in bed due to bad weather! Not a good excuse! Remember deer are killed every single day of the deer season. My biggest buck was killed in the middle of the day. The largest bodied deer was killed in between rain showers. You can scoff and say this is not a real hunting tip but I promise you one thing, if you were to live by this one rule it will increase your kill opportunities more than any other tip you find ANYWHERE.

Source : http://whitetaildeerpassion.blogspot.com/2006/07/tips-and-tricks-deer-hunting-tips.html

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Best Places to Hunt

Southern Saskatchewan

By virtually any measure, Saskatchewan would rank high among North America’s best places to hunt waterfowl. The province is not only the continent’s most important breeding area for mallards, pintails, and other dabbling ducks but also a staging hub for Arctic geese and other waterfowl raised across the Far North. In certain areas of this province’s vast prairie-parkland region, it’s not uncommon to take large and small subspecies of Canada geese, white-fronted geese, light geese, mallards, and pintails in the same decoy spread. Public hunting is available on many large wetland projects conserved by Ducks Unlimited and its partners in the North American Waterfowl Management Plan. Freelance waterfowlers can also secure permission from farmers to hunt on private land.

When it’s hot
: late September-October

Abundant species:
mallards, pintails, canvasbacks, redheads, Canada geese, white-fronted geese, light geese


Eastern North Dakota

Whether you are pursuing Canada geese, light geese, dabbling ducks, or divers, you can find them in abundance somewhere in North Dakota. Located in the heart of the prairie Duck Factory, this state supported more than 8 million breeding ducks in 2009 and hosts even larger numbers of staging waterfowl during the fall migration. Hunting access is available on a variety of public lands in the eastern half of the state, including federal waterfowl production areas, state wildlife management areas, and properties enrolled in the state’s Private Lands Open To Sportsmen (PLOTS) program.

When it’s hot
: October-early November

Abundant species:
mallards, pintails, gadwalls, green-winged teal, lesser scaup, Canada geese, lesser snow geese

Central Valley of California

Acre for acre, the Central Valley of California supports more wintering waterfowl than anywhere else in North America. At peak times, this region hosts 5 to 7 million wintering waterfowl—more than 60 percent of the Pacific Flyway’s ducks and geese. As you would expect, the high ratio of birds to habitat results in some superb waterfowl hunting. This is especially true on private duck clubs in places such as Butte Sink, Suisun Marsh, and the Grasslands. Good public hunting is also available on several intensively managed national wildlife refuges and state wildlife areas in the region, which also support large numbers of wintering waterfowl.  

When it’s hot:
late November-January

Abundant species:
pintails, mallards, wigeon, green-winged teal, Aleutian cackling geese,
 

Central Valley of California

Acre for acre, the Central Valley of California supports more wintering waterfowl than anywhere else in North America. At peak times, this region hosts 5 to 7 million wintering waterfowl—more than 60 percent of the Pacific Flyway’s ducks and geese. As you would expect, the high ratio of birds to habitat results in some superb waterfowl hunting. This is especially true on private duck clubs in places such as Butte Sink, Suisun Marsh, and the Grasslands. Good public hunting is also available on several intensively managed national wildlife refuges and state wildlife areas in the region, which also support large numbers of wintering waterfowl.  

When it’s hot:
late November-January

Abundant species:
pintails, mallards, wigeon, green-winged teal, Aleutian cackling geese,

South Louisiana

Any survey of North America’s top waterfowl hunting areas would have to include Louisiana. America’s Wetland—as south Louisiana’s coastal marshes are collectively known—supports upwards of 9 million migrating and wintering ducks on average. Some of the state’s best duck hunting can be found on the Chenier Plain in southwest Louisiana. Freelancers equipped with shallow-running duck boats will find plenty of public hunting opportunities on the massive Sabine and Lacassine national wildlife refuges in Cameron Parish.

When it’s hot:
late November-January

Abundant species:
gadwalls, green-winged teal, blue-winged teal, pintails, mottled ducks, white-fronted geese, lesser snow geese

Source : http://www.ducks.org/hunting/destinations/15-great-places-to-hunt-waterfowl

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Hunting Practices

Activity: Observing

Have you ever wondered how a hunter can find a deer in the forest? Next time you are in the forest look carefully for clues that an animal has been there. You can look for paw tracks or maybe bits of fur or droppings.

Important Information to Remember:
  • There were summer and winter camps which allowed the Secwepemc people to gather different resources at the different times of the year.
  • Hunters used different techniques while hunting. Sometimes they used a deer call.
  • Sometimes they waited at the animals favourite drinking hole or at the salt licks.
  • Arrow shafts were fashioned from rosewood or saskatoon wood.
  • Daggers were common hunting tools, most of which were made from bone or antler.
  • Knives were fashioned from jade and fastened to handles carved from bone or wood with sinew or hemp string. 
    Hunting:
    The Secwepemc hunted and snared game throughout the fall. For meat, they depended on deer, moose, elk and caribou. Porcupine and squirrel were also eaten.
    Hunters used deer calls and prepared themselves for several days before a hunt.
    Sometimes the hunters waited at the animals favourite drinking places.
    Sometimes they waited at salt licks- places where the animals came to lick the salty ground.
    Secwepemc hunters could imitate animal and bird calls, as well as mimic the sound of bucks rutting by rubbing antlers against branches.
Source : http://secwepemc.sd73.bc.ca/sec_village/sec_hunt.html

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

COLT CO2 AIR PISTOL

  • Length : 218 mm
  • Weight : 980g
  • Less : 7,5 Joules

IZH 46M Match Air Pistol





















Caliber :  .177" (4.5mm)
Velocity : 500 fps
Loudness : 2-Low-Medium
Barrel Length :11.02
Overall Length :16.53


Capacity : 1







Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Songs

Nothing like Country music...     

Hunting songs inspire new guys...











It's just too funny !!
 All wow gamers know this song !!

Nice song anyway...

Turkey Hunting

Tips & Tricks.

Real Turkey shooting !!!

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Nikko Stirling Diamond Series

The diamond series are designed to specifically perform to more extreme locations where the climate and terrain pushes the hunters and their equipment to the limit.
  • Magnification: 3.5-4
  • Weight: 860g
  • Reticle: Mil Dot,RF
  • 10-50X60
With this scope , you just can't miss!

Friday, June 1, 2012

Weihrauch HW100

LENGTH : 38.9"
TYPE : 14-shot pre-charged pneumatic
CAL : .177
MAX VELOCITY : .177 902 fps
TRIGGER : 2 stage adjustable match