How NOT to shoot a coyote

coyote_thumper

Active member
Driveway alarms rang at about 4:30am. Two alarms spaces apart by about 100' rang in close succession indicating something moving through fast.

I leaped out of bed, grabbed the bolt action 20 practical (with blind internal magazine). Grabbed a couple shells off the shelf, knocked others on the floor in my hurry. I fumbled to shove a couple rounds into the internal magazine, hit the power button for the thermal scope, racked a round in the chamber, flipped the lens cap open, ran to the living room window, hit the record button, and opened the window.

I quickly slide the window open, stick the rifle out the window and brace off the window frame. Almost immediately the coyote pops into view. I did a lip squeak and the coyote stopped and stared at me. Scope nucs. (about 1 second felt like 10) Once viewfinder becomes active again I try to steady myself and put the crosshairs on the coyote and pull the trigger.

CLICK! HUH? AAGGH, (I recently swapped my thermal scope to a savage model 11 with a 3 position safety. I forgot to take the safety all the way off.) I quickly flip the safety off, and when I do that the hammer releases. (but doesn't fire) So I also have to rack the bolt up and down to re-cock it.

After re-racking the bolt, I line back up on the coyote, but now it starts to walk away. In my haste I took a quick shot before it walked out of my shooting lane. From the sound of the impact and the coyote's reaction. I knew it was a clean miss right away. AAAAGGGGHHHH!! I was so disgusted with myself. I should have known better. I should have done better. I shouldn't have taken that shot. I should have just waited and lip squeaked to coax it back. Or even let it walk away without "educating it". Live and learn i guess. But this was a painful lesson to learn. A day later and I'm still disgusted with myself.

After watching the video I thought I maybe hit the tree. So I went and looked and sure enough, there's a "flesh wound" on the side of the tree.

 
yeah it sucks to miss. Just gotta look at it as part of hunting. If it makes you feel better I missed what would have been #10 of the season a few weeks ago.

I think another lesson to be learned is to have your gear absolutely good to go. And to be as familiar as possible with it. Part of the reason i think i missed #10 is because it may have been further away than i thought (maybe 250-300 yards) and either i don't know my real bullet drop at that distance or my gun isn't as accurate at that distance as i thought.

since then ive been kicking myself and been on a mission to setup a rig that allows me to be as accurate as possible out to about 275 yards
 
Had the same thing happen archery hunting deer years ago. I was posted in a tree ten or so feet up when a nice 4 point finally walked into range. I drew back the arrow lined up the shot, sure to aim slightly low, it was only about a 15 yard shoot. Meat in the freezer, baby! I let go of the arrow and twannng!!! It hit a branch smaller than a pencil and ricocheted right. All I ended up doing was grazing his butt. I trailed him for about a mile, but never saw him again. Dang branch, never saw it.
 
Sprinlman, Do you have Little People in your House? I don't and none of my guns are unloaded ever, unless I do a Mag dump, but I still have 2 by my bed and 3 by the front door and 2 by the back door. My reason is I live on the Texas Mexico Border and we get visitors that aren't Critters. Murl B.
 
Chalk it up to fog brain.
I think I still have (haven't been there since 04) a Wensel Woodsman broadhead stuck about 1-1/2" in from the side of a big white oak in Schuyler Co. Illinois since 2001 that was sent towards a 150" 10pt at about 15yds.
 
Had the same thing happen archery hunting deer years ago. I was posted in a tree ten or so feet up when a nice 4 point finally walked into range. I drew back the arrow lined up the shot, sure to aim slightly low, it was only about a 15 yard shoot. Meat in the freezer, baby! I let go of the arrow and twannng!!! It hit a branch smaller than a pencil and ricocheted right. All I ended up doing was grazing his butt. I trailed him for about a mile, but never saw him again. Dang branch, never saw it.
I'll one up you.

It rarely snows here in South Carolina during deer season. Well this one year it did and I mean a good snow. I have never blood trailed a deer in the snow so I thought it would be cool. To increase my chances I hunted a stand that I knew I would see about 10-15 does (yes we have a lot of deer here in SC) Sure enough here comes a group of five does. I pick the one I want and put the pin behind her should and released. they took off and I was so excited that I could now blood trail a deer in the snow. The deer came pretty early so I stayed in the stand for a while then it hit me.... I was like, I don't see any blood on the snow. So I got down and couldn't find any blood anywhere. Nor my arrow. I was like what the crap. I looked and looked and looked some more. Then I look up. My arrow was about 10 yards in front of the tree I was sitting in stuck into a damn small sweet gum.
 
Sprinlman, Do you have Little People in your House? I don't and none of my guns are unloaded ever, unless I do a Mag dump, but I still have 2 by my bed and 3 by the front door and 2 by the back door. My reason is I live on the Texas Mexico Border and we get visitors that aren't Critters. Murl B.
No little people anymore, but even though I don't live near the border, unless Oregon counts, I understand your point.
 
I should have known better. I should have done better. I shouldn't have taken that shot. I should have just waited and lip squeaked to coax it back. Or even let it walk away without "educating it". Live and learn i guess.

Been there and done that. Always turns my stomach upside down, meaning I have made more than one mistake. Hang in there and live to hunt another day.
 
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