15 in under 6 hours—six off a single stand.

Infidel 762

Director
Staff member
The coyotes were lit up—responsive, vocal, talking back to everything. I took six off a single stand. It wasn’t rushed. One of those slow, methodical hunts where every move feels deliberate, like you’re letting it come to you instead of forcing it.

On the stand I got six, I set up and opened with a howl. Two groups answered—one straight out front, one off to my right. A single came in on a string; dropped him. Call him The Loner. Swung right—and there it was. Heads bobbing through the green wheat, ghosting in and out like they were riding waves. I dispatched two more from that group. Ghosts in the green.

After that last shot, I heard one losing its mind right at the call—screaming, tearing at the ground. I spun on it and dropped him quick. Screamer.

Scanned right again. Another one way out, circling wide, trying to get my wind. While watching it at a distance, I scanned back on the first downed coyote… and there’s another one standing there, nose down, sniffing his comrade, trying to figure out what just happened. Dropped him too. Comrade.

At that point I figured it was over. Too much shooting, too much noise. And I knew the ones in the green wheat were going to be a pain to recover. So I started replaying the video in the ATRIS 650 V2 LRF to rewatch where they went down—using the video like a map, trying to burn landmarks into memory to mark with green lazers.

While I’m rewatching those heads bob through the wheat again… I scan my surroundings, and another coyote. Standing there. Same spot. Sniffing the first two like nothing just happened. I got back on the rifle. Sixth one down. Circleback.

Took longer to find them all than it did for the stand to unfold. Western quiet fell over us, the moon a cold witness to six ghosts at my feet. April night, bright and alive—but I was the only one breathing.

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Six on one stand isn’t something you plan—it’s what happens when everything lines up, and you don’t rush it. This was the stand.
Then it started…
They just kept popping up… like IRGC leaders.

 
Glad to see ya videoing a night hunt again Jeremy. I understand the excitement of day shot gunning but have missed these installments. Dang exciting 8 minutes if I read the time in your scope correctly.
It took me 58 seconds to get 4 one time a couple years back that was a real rush and 63 minutes to get 5 last year in a set. Don't think I will ever get a 6 pack but can sure appreciate yours.
 
Single file, multiples are unusual (at least for me). 4 only once and only shot 3(3 shots total) #4 stood just part of it's head exposed out of a standing corn field at about 400 yards, didn't try for that one. Between 2nd and 3rd a red fox came in near the 2nd coyote and then left. (Didn't shoot the red because I believed more coyote were in the corn). This was daytime( near sunset) no suppressor. I was laying on top of a grain wagon full of corn, didn't realise at the time what a great sound absorber that position was on the corn. Because the wagon was full and on the bipod, barrel was inside the steel sides. Usually they show in rush. Hunting,competing or defending and than scrambling for an exit.
 
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