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This morning we had 28 degrees and ice on everything. This afternoon it’s near 50 . Decided to walk over to the neighbors woodlot to look for sheds ,,,,,,,,,and possibly get a shot at a rabbit. I zigged and zagged all over the woods finding nothing . But I did get in some stump shooting.
Heading for the house I cut across a little hay field to a brush pile . The dozer operator pushed a lot of dirt into this pile . As I am walking by the brush I spot this rabbit sitting up on one of the dirt piles. I just kept moving slow and nocked an arrow . Turned , focused very briefly ,,drew ,anchored and released .
That da’gum rabbit must have been really cocked . Shot was no more than 20 feet . The arrow cut a hole thru the air right where he HAD been sitting .
Retrieved my arrow and moved on toward home . As I get near the top of this little hill , where I can see over the top I see a fox at about 250 yards . It was within 50 yards of the highway so I figured it would come my way . I picked a spot in the brushline and waited ,,,,,,,,,maybe 2 minutes . Pretty Red trotted by at about 12 yards .
1 1/2 hour hunt ,,,,,,,had a blast. 1970 Bear Grizzly,,56”,,,,45#
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So did the fox get as lucky as the rabbit? Or did you even draw on him? If you did, did you take any pictures? Fox with a recurve would be awesome!
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I didn’t shoot at the fox . Ohio’s Fox season expired Jan. 31.
Had I taken the shot this is how I would have done it . I would have let him pass by to around twenty yards just to avoid being seen drawing . I would have picked an imaginary spot straight over his back , and beyond him about 20 inches .
I have shot at them before and their REACTION time is so fast they are never where the arrow is when I aim directly at them . They have ALWAYS gone striaght away from the sound of the bow .
If I ever get one there will be plenty of pictures .
We have such a high number of coyotes , which have all but wiped out the little foxes . I hadn’t seen any foxes here near home for some time and had imagined they had become supper for the ‘yotes . It was a pleasure in itself to see this red .
40 years ago the Red Fox was what I spent most of my time chasing . That was before the deer population explosion here in southern Ohio . Before the ‘yotes too. And , before the art of turkey hunting got in my blood .
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