The Stand That Made Sense at 47 Yards

Infidel 762

Director
Staff member
This is the kind of storytelling that is easy to:
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Brian set up on the mesa with a rifle, covering everything, while I dropped into the brush with nothing but a shotgun and an idea. That was the plan—simple, maybe questionable.

Walking in, I caught a coyote standing on the ridge ahead of me. I froze—should’ve brought a rifle. The moment he spotted Brian climbing the mesa to my right, he spooked and melted back into the same cover we were about to target. As I was setting up, he lit off with threat barks, letting us know he knew we were there. That yapper put a knot in my gut. The stand already felt thin, but I called it anyway.

A few minutes into the sequence, a bobcat showed up on the ridge, framed against a cedar, just over 100 yards out. Again—should’ve brought a rifle. She didn’t rush. She didn’t flinch. She just sat there, reading the room, owning the moment.

I worked the FOXPRO X24—volume up, volume down, silence in between—letting Cagie Cottontail do its job. Brian held fire and gave me the room to work. That patience was the turning point.

Slowly, almost reluctantly, she started to move. A few steps. A pause. Another look back. Each one felt heavier than the last until she finally crossed an invisible line and slipped into shotgun range.

That was the moment the whole stand made sense.

Walking up on her, adrenaline still buzzing and the dust settling, it hit me—I was damn glad I didn’t bring a rifle.

Shotgun_cat.jpg


I’m no shotgun aficionado like GC, Bob, or Dave. I ranged the spot she stood next to at 47 yards. The #4 TSS through a .670 choke broke her front legs in multiple places and sealed the deal—proof that sometimes the right tool isn’t the one with the longest reach, but the one that forces you to let the story come to you.

Calling in artillery with the ATRIS 650 V2 LRF —Splash over, splash out.
(Call-for-fire comms, minus the howitzers.)

 
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Great story and picture Jeremy!

I think TSS #4 shot is about the perfect size for coyotes and bobcats. It has plenty of range and a much higher pellet count than TSS #2 shot has.

That is re-assuring, I value your knowledge. These rounds are so costly I have never used them to pattern. Just load em in the gun and go hunt. I got a buddy, we are meeting up in Texas to hunt this weekend, and he has some 3x5s for me.
 
Your story brings me back to my early years of coyote hunting when I used the firearms I had available, which was a .22 pump gallery rifle and my fathers 12ga Ithaca riot shotgun.
Being a left hand shooter the Ithaca was perfect except for the weight, which I ended up tolerating because it kicked really hard with LE OO buckshot.
My brothers and I used to drive coyote out of the thick brush in Upstate NY and the shotgun was the right medicine for hunting in close quarters.
It would be a wish and a prayer to hit anything at 47 yards with OO buck.
I enjoy reading your stories, especially ones with the scattergun.
SJC
 
I used a tube-fed Marlin and Ruger 10/22. And then I moved up to a lever-action 30-30.
Your story brings me back to my early years of coyote hunting when I used the firearms I had available, which was a .22 pump gallery rifle and my fathers 12ga Ithaca riot shotgun.
Being a left hand shooter the Ithaca was perfect except for the weight, which I ended up tolerating because it kicked really hard with LE OO buckshot.
My brothers and I used to drive coyote out of the thick brush in Upstate NY and the shotgun was the right medicine for hunting in close quarters.
It would be a wish and a prayer to hit anything at 47 yards with OO buck.
I enjoy reading your stories, especially ones with the scattergun.
SJC

I started with a tube-fed Marlin and a Ruger 10/22, then moved up to a lever-action .30-30. I obsessed over killing a bobcat and hunted a long time before I ever pulled it off. If I could take myself hunting as a kid, it would’ve changed everything—the kid version of me would’ve been mind-blown. Back then, one coyote was enough to make my season. I didn’t know much, just roaming the river with a gun, learning the hard way and getting lucky now and then. Now beginners have the internet—and a lot more people willing to take them out and show them how it’s done.
 
I heard of Bobcat and never saw one till I was 17 and bow hunting at my Aunt's dairy farm after work.
It was almost dark and I heard this growling/screeching coming closer and closer to my stand.
I was scared shitless and was wishing I had any type of firearm instead of my 40 pound recurve.
Then I saw this cat jump up on a rockwall 20 yards away and I almost fell out of the treestand from laughing so hard at myself for being scared of a cat.
I've seen a couple while coyote hunting over the years but never shot because they're so scarce in my area.
It's the struggle that keeps the passion going.
Good luck in Texas.
SJC
 
Looks like a good size cat. The biggest bobcat this weekend in the West Texas Big Bobcat contest is going to win $58,240.00
Heck, 2nd place is going to be $33,260
 
I heard of Bobcat and never saw one till I was 17 and bow hunting at my Aunt's dairy farm after work.
It was almost dark and I heard this growling/screeching coming closer and closer to my stand.
I was scared shitless and was wishing I had any type of firearm instead of my 40 pound recurve.
Then I saw this cat jump up on a rockwall 20 yards away and I almost fell out of the treestand from laughing so hard at myself for being scared of a cat.
I've seen a couple while coyote hunting over the years but never shot because they're so scarce in my area.
It's the struggle that keeps the passion going.
Good luck in Texas.
SJC
Where is “your area”? I’ve had landowners that have never seen a bobcat on their place and I’ll catch 12 in two weeks of trapping.
 
Where is “your area”? I’ve had landowners that have never seen a bobcat on their place and I’ll catch 12 in two weeks of trapping.
NY state, southern zone.
Like deer they were over hunted and it took decades for them to return.
I've seen them at night, but haven't seen one during daylight hours in a long time.
We have dozens of trail cameras out all year long and only one bobcat pic.
SJC
 
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