Hunting & Fishing Strictly Chuckin'

coldboremiracle

Freelance Sharpshooter
Full Member
Minuteman
  • Jul 7, 2009
    5,308
    1,256
    Utah, north
    www.coldboremiracle.com
    Been itchin to get up on the mountain and pursue some rock chucks, who my son named "Rusty" years ago due to his rusty colored coat. The snow has kept us out for a while, but we got up into them yesterday and had a good time. Took the boys along after their triumph at their rec. soccer games. Smoked this one at 191yds with my DTA SRS and .260 barrel.



    Here is the video of the shot, as always enjoy in 1080p if you like:

    Rusty's Busted- YouTube[/QUOTE]
     
    Spent the whole day atop the Rockies yesterday with family and friends, we had an absolute blast! I'm still feeling it in my legs and back. We hurried up the mountain early in the morning hoping to get ahead of all the hikers and ATV enthusiast's. And as suspected, our prey was out just as early, basking in the morning sun. We spent some time getting our equipment loaded up, and started down into one of our favorite haunts.

    Then wind was whipping across the peaks of the still snow crusted mountains, but our destination lay some several hundred feet below, in the green mountain valleys flowing with melted glacial water, blossoming flowers, and bird songs. As we hiked and slid to our spot, the smell of pine needles warming in the sun greeted us, and the wind backed of to a gentle breeze. The soft soil felt like a cushion underfoot, the burrows of winter rodents all around us, it was hard to keep the grin from our faces as this beauty surrounded us.

    we spent no time getting to it, and found a couple chucks high above us on a rocky green face, we all got setup to shoot, and spot the carnage. I took the first shot, shooting 140 Amax's from my .260 Remington barrel in my DTA SRS Covert. The poor little guy never stood a chance, at 280yds, he stood atop a small stone, and I parked one right at his bottom. I had guessed on the wind, and had not given it enough. The bullet looked like it hit him in the left thigh area, and he fell and rolled down the steep hillside like potato. As soon as he stopped, I sent round two. This one found its way right to the middle of Rusty's tender little body, sending him airborne several feet into the sky, exposing his entrails and rearranging them cunningly about the rocks and grass nearby. I had the camera zoomed in, but to my horror, I had not recorded it properly, to my everlasting shame. I apologize to all, as it was truly one of the most awesome shots I could have captured.

    A second chuck was seen milling around through the rocks near the first, Chubbles was quick to mark him through his NXS mounted atop his PCR built 6.5X47 Badger 2008/XLR beauty. He made the same wind estimation I did on my first shot, so his landed just haunch shy as well. The little guy wanted none of it, and quickly made his way uphill towards safety, but he made that fatal chuck mistake, their curiosity makes them stop and look. Chubbles sent round two, and hit Rusty's lady friend right in the shoulder neck area, putting her down nicely.


    Thats Rusty on the right, and his best gal on the left. Notice his spine hanging there from under his hand.


    We decide to let that particular clan rest in peace, and turned 90 degrees to the north and continued our spotting for additional chucks. Chubbles and I brought along the boys, who thoroughly enjoy every minute up there. While Burglecutt and Goathead1096 continued searching, Chubbles and I took the boys on a little hike in the hopes of getting one of the boys onto either a chuck or a squirrel or something. CBM Jr. did manage to make a couple shots on a squirrel, but the pressure got to him I think. We were on top of a windy rocky ridge, and he had to hurry into position. The wind blew his little 17hmr just left of the little guy and he escaped. We still had plenty of fun.



    While we were away, Burglecutt and Goathead1096 spotted a couple more chucks, and managed to put the hurt on one of them near 475 yds. Unfortunately his location was a little farther than anyone wanted to go to see him. So we just looked at him through the scopes for a while, no pictures of him. We spent some time relaxing in the sun, and snacking on treats. Then we eventually made our way back to the truck for the ride home. Some of the best times had.

     
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    Stone cold CBM. Gotta love livin it up in Utah. Your a lucky dog, we havent seen may Chucks up towards Cache Valley for a while. We killed a bunch a few years ago but they've been pretty sparce since then. Good shooting. Glad to see young ones out enjoying the great outdoors. Keep up the good work.
     
    Are mountain chucks as plentiful as say lowland beanfields groundhogs? Damn that looks epically fun to shoot out there. Nice post. Beautiful.

    my experience demolitionman is that they tend to be much more solitary or small family groups up in the high mountains.

    In contrast At my farm property around 3500ft I usually have 6-7 females, and when they all have a litter it is a target rich environment. Then you just have to get rid of most of them unless you have a market for them, my farm has to support me somehow! Yeah, and on my property they all have fleas. gross
     
    I managed to sneak out of work early today, as hoped. On the way home I stopped and rolled my cousin out of bed, the 18yo rookie who makes a good show every time I can get him along. We sped up into the mountains above the house, greeted by ever cooler air, warm sunshine, and some of the best scenery around. When we arrived at the spot I had planned on, we sat down, and started glassing. With the deer hunt not far away, and my undying lust for mediocre antlers, I wasn't letting any bush go unmolested by my hungry eyes. We spotted a few deer, one little buck, but not much else. So I turned my attention to the assorted rock piles that litter the thick green brush covered hills. Nothing obvious jumped through my Swarovski lense, so I let out a short, high pressure whistle, not unlike the alert sound these chucks make when they spot me coming. Almost immediately, a handsome little fella appeared atop a spire of stone, the Swaro said 193, I said ".5 ought to do it." I settled down, and looked through the scope, and put the 1/2 mil mark right at his soft furry brisket. My rookie spotter announced his standbye position, and it was go time. I gently pressed the trigger, and watched through the recoil as the 175 SMK made its way to the top of the spire. The impact was beautiful, rusty caught it just right, and rolled from his secure perch down into a rock pile covered with lichen and moss. Having exchanged high fives, we made our way up to the fortress of stone. Had we not had to wade through the damn rattlesnakes it would have been nice. Damn near stepped right on two of them in that short 190 yard walk, the first one I gave a pass. The second one scared the shit right back into me, and he met the business end of a very dull rock. (I'd have used a sharper one, but it was the closest thing I could grab) So we picked up rusty and swept him off the hill top for his photo premier with my DTA Covert, we cautiously made our way back down the hill, like a pair of hot pant wearing ballerinas. So, for the part you all want to see:



    He was a very handsome specimen, probably the fattest, cleanest, healthy looking chuck I've shot this year.



    As for the Damn rattlesnake, his tap dancing days have come to an end:

     
    So once again, me and the fellas decided to risk life and limb in the pursuit of Rusty and his kin. It would have been nice if Burglecutt had left any for the rest of us. He dispatched our furry little targets for us. The first one, climbed to his rocky perch at 237 yds, and Burglecutt sent the 50gr Zmax from his R700 22-250, it landed just under Rusty's chest on the rock, but it killed him all the same. (powerful medicine them Z max's) Another chuck appeared just under the first, his underhanded tactics of laying low and between the rocks made it a challenge for Burglecutt, but he managed to bounce one into him anyhow. With another dose of 50 gr zombie killer. Both these chucks were younger, I'd guess from this years crop, we were happy to entertain them anyhow.



    One of the two had lost a significant portion of his tail, which had since healed over. Perhaps a close call with a hawk? or a secret squirrel samurai wielding ninja, who knows...



    Here is the HD video of the first shot, make sure to enjoy it in 1080p

    Chuck 237 - YouTube
     
    Summer is quickly coming to a close, we braved the rain and weather today to try one last time. But Rusty was smarter than us, he wouldn't show his timid little face. But his close relative the squirrel was out making his winter preparations:
    Goathead shot this fella with his .223 custom
    Squirrel vs .223 Remington in the FACE - YouTube
    this guy caught a 140 out of my .260 DTA
    Squirrel vs .260 Remington - YouTube
     
    Nice posts!

    I shot the piss out of chucks this summer, too. Even with Colorado's stupid ass chuck laws.... ya' just got to be careful and follow the rules...

    243 AI did a number on most of them.

    This one died at 410 yards via 105 A-Max.



    These ones, at 250 via the 105 A-Max. I shot these sitting with my rig rested atop my pack, so it was some good hunting practice-especially with an 8lb rifle.



    And this one died at 650 yards, via a buddy's 7 Rem and 180 Bergers that he let me run for a few. Wicked rifle....



    Said 7 Rem, with one of my buddy's kills at 620 yards.



    This mofo' caught a hot one under the chin, and I won't tell how far because I wouldn't believe it myself.



    Some good times to be had at 11,000' and above!!
     
    So the reason that we do this is because of this....

    <a href="http://s1344.photobucket.com/user/bartlettjw/media/photo3_zps12de002f.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1344.photobucket.com/albums/p660/bartlettjw/photo3_zps12de002f.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo photo3_zps12de002f.jpg"/></a>

    This is a ~500 acre family farm and it is used for hay and cattle. We've had one tractor rollover due to these a few years back. I typically hunt every evening for a few hours in the month of September but I limit myself to two kills per day. Depending on the setup location, shots range from 100 - 480. The majority run 220+

    This is earlier in the season.

    <a href="http://s1344.photobucket.com/user/bartlettjw/media/photo_zpsa7a0ca3e.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1344.photobucket.com/albums/p660/bartlettjw/photo_zpsa7a0ca3e.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo photo_zpsa7a0ca3e.jpg"/></a>

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    Carnage... Thanks to GA Precision for my new 6.5 Creedmoor.. this was the 3rd shot down the tube, cleaning between with break-in light Varget loads with 123 AMAXs (they were all I could find). A fly landed on my target, 1st shot was off and measured with the NF NP-R1, 2nd was adjusted and dead-on, 3rd was my flying friend as seen. It now lives on 142SMKS and H4350.

    <a href="http://s1344.photobucket.com/user/bartlettjw/media/photo_zpsbe9f608e.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1344.photobucket.com/albums/p660/bartlettjw/photo_zpsbe9f608e.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo photo_zpsbe9f608e.jpg"/></a>

    Last few weeks...

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    Yesterday with the 308. Short Action Customs did a little work on it, but it's mostly stock.

    <a href="http://s1344.photobucket.com/user/bartlettjw/media/photo3_zpsbabf1cd1.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1344.photobucket.com/albums/p660/bartlettjw/photo3_zpsbabf1cd1.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo photo3_zpsbabf1cd1.jpg"/></a>

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    And one more, last but not least.

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    More with the 308 tonight.

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    We just received the first snow of the year, so our time is probably running out. Maybe one or two more outings this year. (For chucks at least)

    Then we shall focus our attention on the desert, and it's bountiful supply of furry creatures.

    Standbye all you lover of gore and carnage, for the upcoming thread: "Strictly Hare's"

    From last year:
     
    Four more tonight. A good friend is back home from the sandbox for a short time, so we splurged and broke my two kill daily rule. Ran the 308 out to about 330 yards and you'll see that the wind caught me off guard and put one in the belly. All in all she's doing well with my Bobro QD mounted PST that I robbed from the gas gun.

    <a href="http://s1344.photobucket.com/user/bartlettjw/media/image_zpse5dd077d.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1344.photobucket.com/albums/p660/bartlettjw/image_zpse5dd077d.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo image_zpse5dd077d.jpg"/></a>

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    Again tonight.... Only one and hunted a different farm.

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