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Thread: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

  1. #1
    hwaugh is offline
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    Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    Well I always knew old Steve Doyle was a little strange, now i am sure. It seems Steve has put away all his high power scoped rifles and gone back to the basics. Steve called last night to let me know that a .69 cal round ball with 60 gr. of FF powder seems to be the right load for talking down his summer nemesis "Mr. Woodchuck." Steve said he got within 50 yds. of his elusive back yard critter and squeezed off his 42' smoothbore. Steve said he took the head clean off the critter and as a true redneck he said he saved the meat for the stew pot.

    Any other Woodchuck smoothbore hunters out there?

    Harry Waugh 3731- Terry's Txas Raangers
    Rascus

  2. #2
    BADSHOT is online now
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    Re: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    All I can say, is from now on when I sight down that old 42 smoothie, at the 50 yard targets, I'll be looking for fur around-em!

  3. #3
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    Re: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    I haven't but I do have a guy at work with several woodchucks at his farm. I was considering heading up for some target practice with a musket or smith (the only two in my collection currently). It is good to know that 60 grains can definately get the job done!
    Mike Howell #12773
    Co. E 3rd Virginia "Cockade Rifles"

    “Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less.” ~ RE Lee

  4. #4
    Southron Sr. is offline
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    Re: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    We don't have woodchucks in my section of Middle-Georgia. I have used my repro Smith Carbine to pop turtles and water moccasins in the farm pond. All one has to shoot at is the head, so the target is hard to hit.

    A "near miss" will enrage a water moccasin and he will literally "charge" you. Of course, you wait until they close the range and then blast them.

  5. #5
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    Re: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    Really? I watermoccasin will charge? Never would have guessed but I guess I am glad to know it now instead of finding out the hard way!
    Mike Howell #12773
    Co. E 3rd Virginia "Cockade Rifles"

    “Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less.” ~ RE Lee

  6. #6
    Southron Sr. is offline
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    Re: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    Water Moccasins are extremely bad tempered and very aggressive, especially if "Riled Up." In addition, this time of year (Spring) is their "mating season" which makes them even more aggressive and bad tempered.

    When they breed, they go into an underwater "Breeding Ball" which is basically a snake orgy. Back in the 1960's, when I was in college at Georgia MIlitary College in Milledgeville, GA there was an incident one Saturday afternoon in May where some people were water skiing on the Oconee River that runs besides the town.

    The people in the boat pulling the individual that was skiing saw him go down, go completely underwater and then-to their horror, when he surfaced momentarily they saw him completely covered with snakes! Two days later when the body was recovered, there were something like 180 snake bites in the victim.

    If you saw the old cowboy, 1980's era mini-series, "Lonesome Dove" there was a scene where the drovers were crossing a river in Texas and one of them, an Irishman, accidentally rode his horse into a Breeding Ball of moccasins. Of course, he went into the water and was bitten all over and died. The author of "Lonesome Dove" is Larry McMutry and he grew up in Texas and knows all about Water Moccasins.

    Another one of my "fun" water moccasin hunting techniques is to use my repro M1842 .69 Palmetto Musket loaded with BB shot and my repro .44 Remington revolver. I use a "Weaver Stance" (two handed grip) to aim the revolver at the snakes head as he is swimming across the pond-the range is usually between 50 and 75 yards.

    Splashing a bullet next to a water moccasin is almost guaranteed to make him charge you. Then when he gets about 20- yards from me in his "charge,", I let him have a load of BB's from the Palmetto Musket! That always ends the "charge" and the snake!

    I guess my point is, that Skirmish arms make wonderful "varmit plinkers."

  7. #7
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    Re: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    How would a snake know which way to "charge" when a pistol ball splashes near him?
    14th Miss Inf Rgt, CSA/N-SSA, NRA Life Mbr, no longer shooting

  8. #8
    Blair is offline
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    Re: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    The Cotton-mouth/Water Moccasin goes after the thing closest to "it", that "it" perceives the danger to "it", is coming from.
    Movement/Motion. Does that help?
    Make light of this phenomenon if you wish, but if you have never had any contact with these creatures in any of your past experiences, it would be wise, indeed, to listen to the lessons being shared herein.
    But then, what do I know?
    Blair

  9. #9
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    Re: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    I have been charged twice in my lifetime by cottonmouths. Both times I did nothing that I was aware of to provoke them. Both times I was fortunate enough to have had a gun with me and dispatched them before they got to me. Cottonmouths are just plain mean I figure.

    Paul

  10. #10
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    Re: Woodchucking with a smoothbore

    I never worried about snakes much. I stepped on a good size snake once with my bare foot and he just crawled away from under my foot. I stepped over a rattlesnake in the road once without seeing it until someone told me he was there. One time I was fishing and at first one, then another, and finally a third came near me and before I decided to move away. Probably they were not cotton mouths. You can learn a lot of interesting things on this bulletin board.

    Too soon old, too late smart!

    David
    DAVID FRANCE

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