'Chuck Hunt

DAA

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Me and @steve garrett went on our annual rock chuck hunt this weekend.

I've had a lot of adventures. I've had a lot of fun. I've seen a lot of amazing scenery. I've driven many, many thousands of miles of dirt without seeing another person. I've had a lot of really good rock chuck shooting. I've had a lot of challenges with getting a vehicle through, or in and out of some tough spots. I've experienced trips with perfect weather. I've experienced great food every night on trips like this. I've experienced laughing my ass off because my friend is so damn funny many times.

Never had a trip that checked all the boxes as strongly as this one.

We made the trip this year a few weeks later than usual. For the specific purpose of getting into a big area we have failed multiple times to reach in the past, due to wet spring conditions. So, first time into this area. And it did not disappoint. The scenery was national park quality. I mean, drop dead, slack jawed, amazing scenery. But we had all of it to ourselves. On Memorial Day Weekend - we had it ALL TO OURSELVES. Drove almost three days without seeing another person. Didn't start seeing the SxS crowd until we were on our way out on the last day. The amount of 'chuck infestations and just wildlife in general was unreal. We saw bobcat, coyotes, deer, pronghorn, 'chucks, squirrels, red fox, every kind of bird. Oh, and a bunch of rattlesnakes!

I am completely deaf to rattlesnakes. Can't hear them. At all. No matter how close I am. I know there are a bunch in the canyon rim country we were filtering through. So, I stuck close to Steve, letting him walk in front. Because he CAN hear them. Let me tell you... When your snake checker dude jumps higher than you thought he could jump, and uses language he doesn't often use - AND, he is NOT effing with you - that get's your attention. Happened several times.

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Shot an embarrassingly huge number of rock chucks. Most, picked off between 300 and 500 yards with precision rifles. Steve mostly used his BAT .243 Ackley. I mostly used my Nesika 6/284. But we mixed in one of my .22BR's and actually ran out of a very plentiful supply of ammo for Steve's .17 Fireball. That Fireball is appropriately named, with script engraving, Lil Poppa. Holy crap it's easy to pick an eyeball within 200 yards with Lil Poppa. And, I got my little P365 in on the action, we killed 15 'chucks with it, plus about a dozen ground squirrels. Furthest chuck with the 9mm was lasered at 52 yards after the shot. That's a bonafide varmint pistol! I think the longest shot of the trip was Steve with his BAT .243 AI at about 525 yards.

My 6/284 is actually a calling rifle, with a heavy sporter barrel in a McMillan Rem. Classic stock and a Zeiss Conquest 4.5x14 without knobs. It's accurate enough to make reliable hits on 'chucks out to about 400 yards with no adjustments. And it's pure filth on 'chucks. Sends them skyward in an invisible blender. I dearly missed my old .22-250AI though. Sent it off to LRI a long time ago with a new Brux barrel blank to be chambered. For four months now LRI hasn't answered their phone or responded to an email. I can't get any form of communication out of them at all. I deeply regret sending it there now and will never use them again for anything. Just purely hoping my rifle comes back someday, whenever that will be, close to what I specified. But I have grave doubts... Live and learn I guess. But do yourself a favor, and don't send your favorite 'chuck rifle off to LRI for a chambering job.

Picture dump!


The P365 varmint pistol!

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We took Steve's truck, affectionately known as the F1-Jeepy, into places an F-150 really should NOT go. A couple of the places we took it, were so hairy, we wont' take there again, even though the canyons were infested with 'chucks.

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This spot above. The picture doesn't come close to doing it justice. Trust me, to go one or two more inches away from that rock would have been bad, bad, BAD. Way steeper than it looks, and we've done that barbeque before and it ain't no fun. We literally could not steer away from that jagged rock that was less than an inch from the sheet metal and absolutely certain to make hard contact whether we tried to go forward or back.

We come prepared though. I had my prospecting rock hammer and Steve and a little mini sledge and a hardened punch. And we chipped about three inches off that rock and gave ourselves about 3/4" to spare driving on by.

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Which, upon successful passage beyond, gave us access to a 'chuck infestation that kept our barrels hot.

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- DAA
 
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Did I mention eating? Inch thick ribeyes. Fajitas with skirt steak marinated to perfection on flash carmelized onions and peppers. Pulled pork butt off my smoker. We camped three nights and each was awesome. Put up the tent only one night, and shouldn't have bothered. It was kind of threatening wind and rain but turned out a very mild night and the tent was not needed.

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Flat tire? Might as well camp right here. Fixed it with no drama at all. We're used to tires going flat. But, I should say... When Steve bought these Les Schwab specials, I made fun of them for awhile. But those tires have 75,000 miles of pure abuse on them and still getting us out there and back! I'm actually in reverent awe of the Les Shabs at this point.

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Dinner!

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- DAA
 
Dave,
I pulled this up to read it a week ago and work called me without reading your post. I specifically remembered I wanted to read it so here I am this morning. That looks like a great time; I always enjoy your posts. The pics are excellent. For a guy in the Southeast, I dream of getting back out West to shoot p'dogs.

Regarding LRI, I'm sorry to hear that. I was in SD 3 years ago and called LRI prior to going out; I asked to have my rifle re-barreled and an ETA. I had barrel in hand and away the family and I went to SD. They were able to re-barrel it while we were out there for the week. The place was beyond busy and was chocked full of people and machinery. It was a very different look from when I visited in 2012. Here's to hoping you get your barrel back and it's a shooter.
 
Regarding LRI, I'm sorry to hear that. I was in SD 3 years ago and called LRI prior to going out; I asked to have my rifle re-barreled and an ETA. I had barrel in hand and away the family and I went to SD. They were able to re-barrel it while we were out there for the week. The place was beyond busy and was chocked full of people and machinery. It was a very different look from when I visited in 2012. Here's to hoping you get your barrel back and it's a shooter.

They actually called me back the day after I posted this. Coincidence? They called to let me know they were ready to do my barrel. But... In discussing, turns out, the reamer they were going to use was completely wrong from the specs I gave them. So... Four more months to get another, hopefully right this time, reamer.

I expect it will be a shooter when all is said and done. And I don't expect these things to happen quickly. But, what I had very specifically been trying to get ahold of them for months about, was the reamer specs. I had sent email voicing concern that I hadn't received and invoice for tooling. I knew an off the shelf reamer would be wrong. And I had a bad feeling they were going to get an off the shelf long throat reamer so for months I was trying to head that off at the pass. But, couldn't get any communication from them for months, and then when I finally got a call back - yup, reamer with a throat for 80's. For a 12 twist barrel... That's a complete no-go. Back to square one.

- DAA
 
We're big fans of the JJ pies. We heat them up underneath the charcoal grill. Eat them hot, with a spritz of whipped cream. Tops off steak and beans to a T!

- DAA
 
Idaho I I would guess. I have my honey holes and have had good success over the years. I have hunted much private ground that basically not many have hunted.

Years ago I used to hunt a lot of private ground - in Idaho. 200 rock chucks in a day was not unheard of. It's been a long, long time since I had to worry about any landowner baloney though. If I have to ask, I'm not interested.

For us it's about the whole experience though. If we get into them really thick like we did this time, awesome bonus. But if we barely see any, we kind of don't care either.

- DAA
 
Great trip.

The stonemason that built that cabin was REALLY good I don't think I've ever seen as straight of corner or stay that straight over time.

Agreed! Whoever built that, CARED. We saw several examples that I did not take pictures of. But I did wonder if maybe the same guy did them all.

This one, for being about 900 years old, ain't too shabby either!

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- DAA
 


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