First Alabama coyote, picture.

rollingstone

New member
There is a place in south Alabama between the Alabama and Tombigbee rivers that we call "The Swamp". Until recently I had only had the priviledge of hunting it twice in my entire life,and I'm 57 years old. My best hunting buddy aquired some land down there a few years ago, and since he is 75 years old and doesn't like to hut by himself anymore I get the opportunity to hunt there fairly often now. 90% of the people in Alabama don't have a clue that "The Swamp" exists and the 10% that do are glad. This area is a wonderous place, abundant with deer,turkey,hogs,coyotes, bobcats,fox, and all the other critters that are indigenous to Alabama. Last Saturday afternoon, after 3 days of getting skunked turkey hunting, I asked my buddy if he wanted to try to call some coyotes. Being the avid turkey hunter that he is, he jumped at the chance to remove any varmints that might kill his beloved turkeys. In south Alabama, turkey hunting comes right behind church and college football. As we were traveling down the dirt road to the swamp, we saw several deer moving and I had a premonition that this was going to be a special afternoon. We proceeded of the dirt road down the trail to the green field with a shooting house on it and while I was gathering up all my equipment from the bed of the truck a 250 pound boar hog walked right past my friend on the other side of the creek where the green field is located. The game was definitly moving. We crossed the creek, got in the shooting house, and let things settle down a little bit. About ten minutes later the big hog that we saw at the creek shows up, feeds for about ten minutes and dissapears. It is now about a half hour before dark and the coyotes get cranked up in the woods about 200 yard behind the green field. We were truly in the "cat bird seat". When the coyotes quit howling I set the Fox Pro in the open window of the shooting house and hit the dying jackrabbit. About 30 seconds later another big hog shows up on the far end of the field. I don't know if he responded to the call or just showed up on his own. Then a large raccoon comes out of the woods on the far end of the field and comes straight to the shooting house like it was on a string. Wepassed on the hog and the coon because we wanted those coyotes we had heard earlier. When the hog and coon left the field, I turned the call of and waited about 2 minutes. Actually I was trying to find my readind glasses so I could read the small print on the side of the call so I could make my next move. Once I got my glasses on I found the female invitation and let out 2 howls. I imediately went back to the jackrabbit and cranked it up. What happened next was so exciting I can barely type it. I looked to my right about 75 yards up the green field and here comes a pair on a dead run straight across the field from right to left. I had the bushmaster pointed out the window of the shooting house and when they got to the middle of the field I barked and they stopped. The big male stopped dead in my crosshairs. I just flipped the safety off and sqeezed the trigger. He went about 10 feet and pilled up. I could not get on the female before she left the field. I have been a licensed guide for 15 years in Alabama and have called in a bunch of turkeys for myself and clients, but I can honesty say that calling in my first coyote was as big a thrill as calling in my first gobbler. On a side note, the bullet I was shooting was a Barnes 53 grain triple shock. It went in right behind the shoulder, couldn't hardley find the entrance hole, made a hole on the off side about the size of a dime. Very fur friendly. I want to thank all the members of this forum for the knowledge I have gained here. Ya'll deserve the credit for making this hunt a success. Sorry for such a long story, but I just didn't want to leave anything out. I never thought I could love any kind of hunting any more than turkey hunting, but I am now dually addicted.
THESWAMP-JACKSONAL-1.jpg
 
Congrats on your first one! I can feel your excitement! Thats great. Nice rig ya got there. What ya got on top for a scope?
 
Congrats on your first coyote, not to mention you took it with your best friend. Cant get much better than that. Thats a pretty sick looking set-up you got there. What kinda scope is that?
 
awsome story. hey is that a b.mster varminter. 24 inch fluted barrel. i have one and wondered how accurate it is and what ammo works the best for you
 
thats awesome man! any info on where the swamp is? my hunting camp is in balcksher which is the exact area you described and we call our camp the swamp too. stockton is close to us too and the stagecoach cafe right where 225 hits 59. goin down highway 59 you turn down a dirt road as soon as you see the blacksher sign and take it down to our camp. i was there this past weekend turkey hunting with Tom Kelly as a matter of fact, i won a hunt with him about 2 years ago but it had to wait til recently. and yes, it is like heaven on earth down in the swamp if you enjoy the outdoors at all. O yea im gad i have witnesses as to how big the normal hogs in our swamp are. i have seen several that push 400 and killed one this past weekend with my .204 that was 317, it was a charge kill too, best way to Christen to .204 i guess
 
Congrats, I really enjoyed your story. Seems you found a sweet place to hunt. Good looking rifle too.

I spent a summer years ago with my aunt and uncle in Selma. I fished the entire summer and really enjoyed Alabama.
 
Thanks, for the kind words ya'll. I will try to answer everyone's questions. First WI sharpshooter, the rifle is a bushmaster varminter. The scope is an ATN day night rig. It has an 80mm. objective lens and the tube is 44mm. the scope is variable power, 4 to 12. When it is set up for daylight shooting the military dot reticle can be illuminated and the color of the crosshairs is red. The night vision part of the scope is a separate tube. You just push a button to release the daytime tube, and put on the night time tube. I special ordered the night time tube directly from ATN. It is generation 3 technology. When you look into Gen. 3 there are different grades of resolution and by talking directly to the factory I was able to get the best resolution Gen 3 tube. This is not the same Gen. 3 that Cabelas sells. The resolution on their Gen 3 is lower. I haven't looked thru one of theirs at night, but mine is awesome. It also has an infared illuminator that acts like a spotlight for the night vision. With the infared on animals eyes light up just like with a spotlight. When the night tube is on the scene is green and you can illuminate the crosshairs also. In night vision mode the crosshairs show green on green background. I did not want a dedicated night vision rifle because night vision is not legal in Alabama. So I can hunt legal here and go to Texas and have fun there. The cost was about $3600. A lot of people DIS ATN, but I an well pleased. Before I mounted the scope on the rifle we would sit in shooting houses at night and just watch game. It is truly a different world. You can look into the woods on the other side of a green patch and see eyeballs coming down a tree at 250 yard and although the range of recognition is only about 150 yard you know it is a raccoon. Accuracy of the bench is about 1" at 100 yard with 1 or two touching. 300 yards, 3 inch groups. I had a nikon monarch 6.5 to 20 on the rifle before I got the ATN and on 20 power you could rag the same hole with 5 shots pretty consistently. Before I got the Bushy I always shot bolt actions. I was amazed that any semi-automatic could perform like that. Georgia Joe I did not weigh the coyote but I would guess 35 pounds. It was a large male. Fog dog the busshy shoots anything I feed it real well. I've even gotten good groups with Wolf ammo. The Bushmaster is top shelf in my book. Eddie 10/22 the swamp I hunt is near Carlton. I'm just north of you. I hope you had good luck on your hunt with Tom Kelly. I met him Years ago When he was a "Big Dog" with the conservation department, he is a true prince of a person to be around. Eddie send me a PM maybe we can get together in the swamp. I shot a 250 pound boar down there last weekend of deer season. Those we saw on the coyote hunt were that large or maybe a little larger. i have tried to answer everyones questions to the best of my ability. I only took 1 semester of typeing in 1967 so it takes me a while to get all this information typed. I never owned a computer until last year, and I have to talk to the younger crowd to learn how to post pictures etc. When I first got the computer last year I was reading instruction on how to perform some task and it said press any key. I looked for 2 hours trying to find the key with "any" wrote on it. the young ones had a big laugh on that one!!
 
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