Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: This is the long and the short of it.
The Varminter Forums > The Varminter Forums > The Airgun Forum
VarmintAir
It was an absolutely stunning Fall day in the Ponderosa's again today. Once again I was out after the wily Tassel Eared Squirrels. Two weeks ago I hunted with my AA 410CRBSL, last week it was the Discovery, and today it was my RWS Rapier two shot PCP. All are .22 caliber.

I had recently mounted a Leupold 4X12X40 Vari-X-II scope on it and I needed to sight her in. This scope only parallax adjusts down to 25 yards, but since I rarely get shots under 30 yards, and the optics are very good, I thought I would put her on the Rapier and field test her today.

I did a rough sight-in at 30 yards and then moved the target out to 50. Within a few shots she was printing in the center of the bullseye, and the groups were around half an inch. I brought the target back in to 25 yards and fired three shots, to see what my hold under would be at the midway point of my sight-in distance. It was one inch on the button.

I was in an area that I hadn't hunted yet, but had seen a few weeks ago while out scouting around. It was mixed young and old growth pines, with lots of park like open areas. As soon as I got into the forest I started seeing squirrel sign, clipped pine needle clusters, and field stripped pine cones were everywhere.

About 500 hundred yards into the woods I came across a well used game trail. It had lots of elk, and deer track going in both directions. I decided to hunt along this trail and see where it took me. I had only gone a couple of hundred yards when I saw a squirrel bolt up the side of a tree. He was around the back side, so I shot a quick range on the trunk and then using my binoculars, slowly started glassing the tree looking for any sign of him.

I had been glassing for a few minutes when he popped out on a limb about 30 feet up the tree. He was sitting in plain view facing me. He had all four feet on the limb and he was kind of bent over like they do when they are scolding something. Only this guy wasn't making a sound. He was 47 yards away. I put the crosshairs between his eyes and squeezed off the shot.

I couldn't believe it. He took off up the tree like it was a clean miss. My first thought was, "how in the he%) did you miss that sucker? I immediately grab my binos and started looking for him. Well, it turns out that he had only gone up about ten feet and was sitting with his back to me. I could see a part of him through a bunch of pine needles. As I was getting ready to try and slip a pellet through the needles, he started rocking back and forth, like he was about to lose his balance and fall off the limb.

Sure enough, ten seconds later, down he comes. When I get over to him I discover that the pellet went just under his chin, through his lower throat area, and out the middle of his back. I thought I had missed him clean.





I gathered him up, took a couple of pics, and continued hunting along the game trail. I had gone several hundred yards when something moving off to my left caught my attention. Upon closer examination, what I saw was the wind ruffling the hair on a squirrels tail. He was sitting in the shadows on a low limb. The rangefinder said 37 yards. If it hadn't been for the wind blowing this guys tail, I probably would have gone right by him. I held just a bit low on his head and squeezed off the shot.

The THWACK of a well placed head shot was followed by him tumbling to the ground. Awesome! Two in the bag. Again I took a couple of pics gathered him up, and started a slow hunt back to my rig. I hunted about 100 yards away from, but parallel to the game trail on my way back. I didn't see another squirrel.





I put my two trophy's in the cooler, grabbed a quick bite to eat, had a bottle of Gatorade, and headed out in the opposite direction from the earlier hunt. I hadn't seen anything for about a half an hour when I suddenly spotted a squirrel on the ground foraging around in the grass. I lasered him at 58 yards. I set the RWS on the Stoney Point bipod, allowed for a left to right wind and launched the pellet. It was a clean miss. I could see pine needles and dust kick up behind and to the right of him.

He wasn't going to hang around for another shot and headed for the nearest tree. @#%$*&)%, I hate it when that happens. I was watching the tree he's in with my binoculars, when I see a squirrel run up a tree almost directly behind the one I'm watching. He goes up about twenty feet and walks out to the end of an old broken off branch. He's in plain view but 76 yards away. I guess I'm outside his danger zone, so he decides to stretch out on the limb in the shade and watch what I'm doing.

Again I get the RWS settled on the Stoney Point, adjust the parallax ring, take a nice deep breath, let most of it out, put the tip of the post of the duplex crosshair on his head, and since I missed the previous shot to the right, I held a bit more into the wind and touched off the shot. YESSS! A RESOUNDING THWACK echoes back to me and he rolls off the limb. He's stone dead when he hits the ground on his back.

I don't know what I would do without the Stoney Point bipod. I'm sure there are guys out there that could make that shot offhand, but I'm not one of them. I need all the help I can get.

It's getting close to 4 o'clock, I'm a good half hour hike away from my vehicle, so I decide to end the day on a high. I pick up my long range trophy, shoot a couple of pics, and start hoofing it back to my rig. I stuck a pine needle into the entrance hole to show the exact point of pellet impact.

As I had thought, for most of my hunting applications, I don't need a scope that parallax adjusts down to 10 yards.

What a great day slipping through the woods in pursuit of the Tassel Eared Tree Squirrel. Airgun hunting is in a class all its own. It's some of the most rewarding hunting I have ever done, and I can't wait to go again. I'm thinking maybe Wednesday.




MikeNC
Great animated story Rldgcntr biggrincamo.gif them tasssel ears look plenty hefty like the fox squirrels. Are they any good eating freakedcamo.gif
VarmintAir
QUOTE (MikeNC @ Nov 18 2008, 02:02 AM) *
Great animated story Rldgcntr biggrincamo.gif them tasssel ears look plenty hefty like the fox squirrels. Are they any good eating freakedcamo.gif


Quite tasty actually. Pretty good amount of meat on these guys.
Ronb
Nice picturesd and read Cliff!
How do you like the RWS pcp? I haven't heard of a two shot....
How old are they?


Ron
VarmintAir
QUOTE (Ronb @ Nov 20 2008, 03:17 AM) *
Nice picturesd and read Cliff!
How do you like the RWS pcp? I haven't heard of a two shot....
How old are they?


Ron


Thanks Ron. In it's early days, FX Airguns out of Sweden built guns for other manufacturers and RWS was one of them. They also built guns for Logun and Webley. The RWS Rapier is just a two shot version of FX's FX 2000, which is an 8 shot. As you can see, it's as accurate as anyone could want. They also branded the FX 2000 for RWS. It was called the RWS Excaliber.

Great guns and not usually to expensive on the used gun market.
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2010 Invision Power Services, Inc.