224 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
224 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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HUNTING TO SURVIVE
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By Bob Newman
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THE tremendous cow moose stepped out from the spruce thicket
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into the tote road that my hunting partner, Pete and I were
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crouched along the side of. We had seen the beasts moving through
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the dense understory and had taken up position behind a small fir
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about 25 yards downwind from them. We knew there were at least
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two moose, but were unable to tell if one was a bull, because of
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the extremely limited visibility.
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Pete, an expert marksman and sound all-around outdoorsman, drew
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a bead on the big cow astride the road and paused, waiting to see
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if a bull stepped out behind her. His Ruger No. 1, chambered
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in .270 Winchester, was rock steady as the crosshairs of his
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scope found the mark. I was directly behind him.
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"Hold on," I whispered softly. "Wait for the other one."'
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A moment later the other one appeared. A slightly smaller cow.
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"Take her." I whispered.
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Pete's .270 spoke with authority and the unseen round sped
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towards its target, a spot right between the giant moose's eyes.
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It impacted precisely where Pete had directed it. And bounced
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right off her sloped forehead.
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To say that we were surprised at this annoying turn of events
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would certainly be an understatement. We tad both seen a chunk
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of fur and some bone fragments fly off her grazed head, but it
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was clear the round did not penetrate more than a couple of
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millimeters, since the critter was still standing in front of us.
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She and the other cow wheeled and bolted back into the thicket
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from whence they came. I managed to get off one poorly placed
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shot at the fleeing moose, but the round flew high and found
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nothing but air.
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We stood in stunned silence for a few minutes before either of
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us spoke. Neither of us had ever seen anything like that, in our
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combined 45 years of hunting.
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Pete spoke first, "I don't believe that! I nailed her right
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between the runnin' lights!"
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"The round bounced clean off 'er. Let's see if we can cut some
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sign;' I replied, and we both cautiously moved into the thicket.
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No need to pursue her at close quarters. A wounded moose is not
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the creature of choice to get up close and personal with in
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situations such as these. Their broad, slashing hooves and im
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pressive size have sent many a woodsmen to his grave.
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We spent the next 90 minutes searching for sign, finding only a
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few spots of dark blood among the widely-placed prints in the
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soft earth. For more than a mile we trailed her until finally the
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blood disappeared altogether. It was painfully clear to us that
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she was barely scratched and had no intention of slowing down.
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Incredible but true. A quirk in ballistics and the sloping fore
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head of the moose had cost us a freezer full of tender meat.
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Not five minutes after we dejectedly clambered back into Pete's
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venerable LandCruiser we spotted another huge cow feeding in a
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bog. Pete chambered a round and scampered along the side of a
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knoll to get into firing position.
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As the gargantuan animal lifted its head from the murky mire
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Pete let 'er fly, the round catching the cow just behind and
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below the right ear. She went down like an Iraqi bridge.
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We would have that tender meat in the freezer after all. Five-
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hundred pounds of it to be exact.
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That memorable excursion in the pristine mountains of western
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Maine, near the village of Rangeley taught me an important lesson
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in survival hunting: Expect the unexpected, even the seemingly
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impossible And don't get "down in the mouth" because something
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didn't go as planned. Press on! Your luck will change. It's just
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that you have to make it change.
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Be An Animal - That's right. Be an animal! After all you are one.
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Man has been hunting for survival for eons, literally. Sure, he
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was a bit hairier and somewhat more attuned to his environment
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when he was what anthropologists call Cro-Magnon or Neanderthal
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He had to be in order to make it. But that doesn't mean you can't
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be just as adept a survivor as your forebearers.
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You've got what it takes to be an efficient survival hunter. You
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were born with it, "it" being survival instinct. We all were.
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What you have to do though, since man has become a creature who
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is what a buddy of mine calls a "slave to comfort;' is relearn
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what modern man has lost.
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So how do we go about this reeducation? A number of ways, the
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most effective of which is hands-on training. In other words
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first-hand experience. Hook-up with someone whose expertise in
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the art of survival hunting is known to you. Every time he - or
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she - steps into the wilds to hunt, you be right behind them. Ask
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questions. But not when your mentor is about to dispatch the
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grizzly they have been tracking for seven hours and is now mere
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yards away from. Wait for a more advantageous time.
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Read. Read everything you can get your hands on pertaining to
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hunting. And don't just stick with the more modern books, either.
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The works of old are often intriguing and exceptionally well-
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written. A few of my favorites are Osborne Russell's Journal of a
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Trapper Wm. O. Pruitt Jr:s Wild Harmony Animals of the North
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Stalking in the Himalayas and Northern India, by Lt. Col. G.H.
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Stockley and David Attenborough's The Living Planet. Not exactly
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what you expected? Trust me. I have gleaned reams of information
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from books such as these. Information that has proven invaluable
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to me time and time again.
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Other excellent books include The Audubon Society Nature Guide
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series, which is jammed with myriad bits of useful information,
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The Audubon Society Field Guide Series, which is outstanding, and
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Harper & Row's Complete Field Guide to North American Wildlife.
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You would do well to have these in your personal library.
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Own a TV? Your local PBS channel may offer one of the best
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nature shows on television: Nature Scene. If you get it, don't
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miss it. Another worthwhile production on your PBS station is
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Nature.
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L.L. Bean, which I teach a wilderness survival workshop for in
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their Outdoor Discovery Program, offers one of the finest series
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of hunting videos available. For a list of all the videos they
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have available, write to L.L. Bean at Freeport, Maine 04033.
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There are also a wide variety of magazines on the market that
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publish a plethora of information on hunting Don't make the
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mistake of buying a magazine for its eye-catching cover, though.
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Buy the magazine for its instructional value, not its aesthetics
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If you are in a genuine survival situation, common sense dic
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tates that you must take what you find. The rules go out the
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window when it's between you and Mother Nature. Keep in mind,
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however, that when you are "practicing" your survival skills,
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ethics dictate that you must stay within the realm of the law.
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Those laws may seem bothersome to you from time to time, but they
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are the reason we still have game to hunt in this country.
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It goes without saying that different animals have different
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habits. One factor remains a constant, though. Everything an
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animal does is directly influenced by its need for food and
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water, shelter from the elements, self-preservation or procrea
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tion. If you approach survival hunting with these things in mind,
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you will already have taken a giant step forward in being a
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successful hunter.
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If you are impatient, stop being so right now.
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There now. That was easy, wasn't it? The most proficient hunt
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ers are patient almost to a fault. They can - and do - lay in a
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"hide" for hours on end without so much as twitching. They will
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stalk or track their quarry until they take it, regardless of low
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long it takes or what the conditions are. Patience means determi
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nation.
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And they are intimately familiar with the habits of their prey.
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They do not guess. They calculate. They do not take risks. They
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weigh the odds and take the necessary action. They hunt intending
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to kill. They mean full well to come out on top.
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In survival hunting, it's not how you play the game; its wheth
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er or not you win. If you win, you live. If you lose, you don't
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live.
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Deer such as the revered white-tailed (Odocoileus virginianus)
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are one of the most wary mammals on the continent. Becoming an
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expert at successfully hunting them takes years, even decades.
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They are elusive beyond belief at times, but still find their way
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into tens of thousands of hunter's freezers every year.
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These hunters know that deer, like any other animal, crave sex,
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though probably not for the same reason humans do. They use buck
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"grunts" to lure in rutting males. They smear the vegetation
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around their hides and stands with chemicals that imitate doe
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estrus. They take note of sign that indicates the presence of an
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active buck, such as scrapes and rubs.
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They also know that deer love apples, acorns and a remarkable
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variety of other foods. They put this knowledge to good use by
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taking up a shooting position between resting and feeding areas.
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And they are very aware of the fact that deer have exceptional
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ly keen senses. Their sense of smell and sound are incredibly
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well-tuned.
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Curiosity is one of their shortcomings as well, besides their
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sometimes overpowering urge for food and sex. On several occa
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sions I have snuck up on deer that were lying on hillsides,
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looking down onto a road, watching the cars go by.
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Waterfowl, on the other hand, do not display this blatant sense
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of curiosity. Ducks and geese are known for their skepticism and
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shyness. They do, however, have a strong desire for companion
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ship. They can be lured into a decoy set if you place the blocks
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correctly and use your call in the right manner.
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Both of these skills takes practice, as you might expect. After
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more than two decades of water fowling, I am just now beginning
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to get quite good at the use of decoys and calls. Then again, it
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may be that I am just a tad slower than the next guy.
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Ducks and geese have fantastic eyesight. Perfect camouflage
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means more birds for the survival hunter.
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Upland game such as rabbits and squirrels are frequently -
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almost always - easier to come by than big game like deer and
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moose. There are generally more of them in a given area, and they
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are usually much less wary. Woodchucks, prairie dogs, badgers,
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marmots and other burrowing mammals make for easy pickings if you
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are good with a flat and fast shooting varmint rifle such as
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the .220 Swift or 15-06 Remington. Look for woodchucks in the
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early morning and late afternoon in rocky fields, especially
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those with a bit of slope to them.
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Start boning up now for the time when survival hunting is no
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longer a pleasant diversion on a perfect weekend, but a "do or
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die" situation when you least expect it.
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Unlikely? That's what the Filipinos and Japanese thought,
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until volcanoes started going off in their backyards.
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(This article was optically scanned from :
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AMERICAN SURVIVAL GUIDE/DECEMBER 1991)
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