We'll I think I've got the flu bug, the last two day's feeling like some of my harvest look lol. I awoke this morning with the sweats, aches and pains but the weather here has been outstanding, 70+ degrees so I sucked it up and dragged myself to the rig with my B26 Sporter and headed for the nut farm. I arrived and with a swig of flu medicine I headed for the sticks and just stepped inside the tree line when I spotted a big shadow of a Squirrel on the trunk of a tree. The sun was to the front of me so he was up and out there somewhere so I moved next to a brush pile and started to glass from the shadow back to where I thought he would be and sure enough there he was. He was just starting to stretch himself out for a tan and hadn't spotted me but with the open ground between us I couldn't move in on him. This was going to be a long shot for sure as I did a quick scope adjustment, I'm looking at over 30yrds but here we go. She was locked and loaded with CPH so I raised her up and rested the crosshair on the side of his mug. I took my time and just focused on just that spot between the eye and ear then released the CPH. WHACK! which is a great sound and I watched through the scope as he fell from his tanning bed and while free falling hit several limbs on the way down. He hit the turf but to my amazement started to crawl on his left side leaving a blood trail behind him in the leaves. This big buck had crawled ten feet before expiring to the blood loss and I praised him for the fighting effort as I stepped out some yards which came to a little under 35yrds, not to shabby I thought as I sweated out this cold bug. I took a look up at the tree and I could see blood from limb to limb that he hit on the way down then from there across the leaves to his final resting spot, one tough fella. The rush from the hunt wore off and feeling the bug again I grabbed a pic for my hunt buddies, dressed him out then headed out myself. As I was working my way back to the rig I looked back to see half a dozen nutters moving through the trees, no worries though I know where their at and one is all that I need today, good medicene.:) Ed