Author Topic: My Dinner  (Read 4056 times)

Offline longislandhunter

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My Dinner
« on: December 15, 2008, 02:11:08 PM »
Spent the entire day running all over creation,,,, by the time I got back home it was 3:30 in the afternoon.  After spending all day doing all the things I didn't really want to do I just had to finish out the day doing something I actually wanted to do,,,,so,,,, I grabbed the .22 cal Goldfinger, a tin of Predators and raced to the duck farm to hunt the last hour of daylight.  

Got to the farm in record time, parked the truck, loaded the Goldfinger and made a bee line for the nearest section of woods.  As I got to the tree line I heard the familiar sound of pigeon wings flapping.  I looked up just in time to see a fat pigeon take off from the high branches of a large maple tree about 25 yards above my head.  Apparently the bird had been sitting there watching me approach however I failed to notice it.  I watched him take flight, figuring he would just keep on going, but for some reason he only flew about 30 yards and landed in the top of another maple.  I slowly made my way closer.  When I was 25 yards away I put the crosshairs on his chest and sent the Predator his way.  A second later I heard the "POP" as the Predator slammed into his breast.  At the sound of the pellet hitting home the bird took off again but he only made it about 5 yards before he crumpled and fell to the ground.

I loaded another Predator into the Goldfinger and went to retrieve my bird.  As I approached the dead pigeon, which was lying in the middle of some really thick thorn bushes, I suddenly saw something dart out from under the bush as I reached in to grab the bird.  I forgot about the bird and focused on the light brown blur moving through the briars to my left.  It was a really nice sized rabbit.  He raced off to my left but came to a dead stop 15 yards out.  Big Mistake  :)     I couldn't take a head shot because the briars were blocking is head, but I could see the rest of his body clearly.  Since he was quartered away from me I put the crosshairs just behind his right shoulder and fired.  The pellet slammed home and the rabbit fell over on his, quivered a few times, then laid still.  Picked up my rabbit, picked up my pigeon and went back on the hunt.  

I stalked around the duck farm until dark and did see a fat squirrel just about dusk, but never got another shot.  Came home and took a couple of pics for my GTA buddies before cleaning and frying both critters for dinner.  As I finished cooking them my oldest daughter, who just came home for the holidays, reminded me how much she enjoys rabbit and pigeon,,,, so I wound up sharing my dinner with her.  

The pics arent't he best as it was dark when I took em.



Jeff
\"If it was easy it wouldn\'t be hunting, it would be shopping.\"

Offline JOHNNY QUEST

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RE: My Dinner
« Reply #1 on: December 15, 2008, 02:22:42 PM »
Jeff That goldfinger is a sweetlooking shooter and it really shines beside that huge squab..  

 Nice....
A MEMBER OF THE \"OTHER\" DARK SIDE...... NV
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Offline luckycharm

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Re: My Dinner
« Reply #2 on: December 15, 2008, 02:50:42 PM »
nice shooting my friend

Offline kiwi

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Re: My Dinner
« Reply #3 on: December 15, 2008, 04:01:16 PM »
Great shooting, A big fat  Heare
Kiwi

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Offline only1harry

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RE: My Dinner
« Reply #4 on: December 15, 2008, 04:26:35 PM »
Great story & pics Jeff!  I 'm glad you were able to get out and do some hunting.  I take it your back is doing a lot better now?  

Many I love those R9's.  I 've been meaning to get one for a while, but with all these Condors I 've been buying I need to wait after the holidays to recover financially.  Do they make one in .25cal?  Just kidding!  :-)
Springers:
Diana 36 .177
Diana 350 .22 (donated by Timmy!)
Diana 350 .177
PCP\'s:
Air Force Condor .22 (Airhog)
Air Force Condor .25 (Talon Tunes)
Air Force Condor .25 (Lemak)  
CO2/Pump:
RWS Hammerli 850 .22
Crosman 2240 Custom .22
A few Crosman pumpers .177

Offline longislandhunter

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RE: My Dinner
« Reply #5 on: December 15, 2008, 04:39:27 PM »
Thanks all.   Yeah Harry, my back is finally doing better, not 100 % yet but much better.  :)  

I unfortunately get flare ups from time to time, this one just happen to be severe,,, but I'm back in hunting form and plan on harvesting more critters in the days to come :)

Jeff
\"If it was easy it wouldn\'t be hunting, it would be shopping.\"

Offline ParishM

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Re: My Dinner
« Reply #6 on: December 15, 2008, 05:28:27 PM »
you eat pigeon ?   yuck !
A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.

Offline longislandhunter

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Re: My Dinner
« Reply #7 on: December 16, 2008, 12:35:00 AM »
Yup, one of my favorite meals.  Ya never heard of squab ???   :)

Jeff
\"If it was easy it wouldn\'t be hunting, it would be shopping.\"

Offline TCups

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RE: My Dinner
« Reply #8 on: December 16, 2008, 12:55:38 AM »
Jeff:
Nice Goldfinger.  Nice shots.  Nice dinner.

Offline gamo2hammerli

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Re: My Dinner
« Reply #9 on: December 16, 2008, 02:40:37 AM »
Wow...those two critters are big.  Great hunting story and shooting.  It`s the best....hunt em and eat em right away....you get all of their vitamins and protein.
Gamo: Expotec .177 + Big Cat .177 + Viper .177 + Whisper .177, Hammerli Titan .177, Diana model 24 .177, RWS-Diana P5 Magnum pistol .177, Crosman: G1 Extreme .177 + Storm XT .177 + Sierra Pro .177 + 1377 pistol .177, Air Arms S410SL .22, BSA Scorpion T10 .22, FX Cyclone .177, Remington Air Master 77 .177 + BB\'s,

Offline ParishM

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Re: My Dinner
« Reply #10 on: December 16, 2008, 05:45:50 AM »
maybe it's safe where you live but here in Miami the pigeons are as diseased as
sewer rats !
A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.

Offline JOHNNY QUEST

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Re: My Dinner
« Reply #11 on: December 16, 2008, 05:51:00 AM »
Quote
ParishM - 12/16/2008  12:45 PM

maybe it's safe where you live but here in Miami the pigeons are as diseased as
sewer rats !


 Why would pidgeons be diseased?? the pidgeons around here only eat the feed from the friendly neighbors feeders..:)  i would say corn fed...  They are in the same family as dove...  but bigger:)
 Strait out of the Texas Parks and Wildlife manual..
 

Completely different images come to mind when we hear the words pigeons and doves, but technically no difference exists between the two, and the terms often are used interchangeably. True, those small, fast-flying game birds, able to challenge the shooting skill of any bird hunter, are doves. However, that plump pigeon perched on a building ledge or waddling around the city park looking for a handout is also a dove – a rock dove.

All pigeons and doves are members of the Columbidae family. They have soft, thick plumage in a variety of colors and patterns, with most species displaying some type of iridescent glossing. No seasonal changes in coloration occur, and except for the somewhat duller hues of the female, the *_*_*_*_*_*es are alike.

 The small Inca dove adapts readily to urban areas and city parks.
Both *_*_*_*_*_*es share in incubating the eggs and in feeding the newly hatched young a substance called "pigeon milk," which is secreted from the adult's crop. Later the parents regurgitate partially digested food for the young. Adults eat seeds, fruit, and vegetable matter, and a few species also eat a variety of insects and other small invertebrates. Instead of drinking in the typical bird manner – taking a sip, tipping back the head, and allowing the water to trickle down the throat – the pigeon or dove immerses its bill and drinks with sustained sucking.

Of the 289 dove species found in the world, only 8 are considered full-time or part-time residents of Texas. Of these, only the mourning, white-winged, and white-tipped (white-fronted) doves are legal game birds.

The mourning dove, slightly smaller than the whitewing, is the most common and abundant game bird in the United States. It breeds in each of the contiguous forty-eight states and is the only native Texas bird that occurs in all of the state's 254 counties. As long as there is enough water present to allow the bird to drink once a day, the mourning dove can thrive in almost any habitat. This adaptive ability and its year-round multiple-nesting cycle contribute to its abundant numbers. Millions are harvested each year without endangering the population. Its cruising speed of forty miles per hour has enabled it to avoid many a shotgun blast and tests the skill of any bird hunter. When flights of mourning doves and whitewings mix, the mourning dove can be distinguished by its more rapid wing beat, erratic flight path, and pointed tail. Its mournful ooah, cooo, cooo, coo call is made year-round, and from a distance only the three coo's can be heard.

The white-winged dove has a conspicuous white bar on its wings and a long, moderately rounded tail. This popular game bird generally is found south of a line extending from El Paso to Del Rio to San Antonio to Corpus Christi, with the heaviest concentrations in Starr, Cameron, Hidalgo, and Willacy counties. An isolated population is found on Galveston Island, and wandering birds occasionally may be spotted throughout the state in the fall.

Migrating whitewings begin moving into the Lower Rio Grande Valley at the end of March and set up housekeeping in native brush and citrus trees. Their adaptation to citrus trees is helping to counteract some of the losses brought about by the destruction of native brush in the area. Their call, which sounds something like the crowing of a young rooster, is made up of two vocalizations – a harsh coo-uh-CUCK-oo and a "who-cooks-for-you" sound.

 Whitewings get their name from the white bars on their wings.
The white-tipped dove, formerly known as the white-fronted dove, is similar in size and shape to the white-wing and may be mistaken for this game bird. However, the whitetip is slightly larger and has cinnamon-colored wing linings. Generally no more than one or two of these solitary birds are seen at a time. A local name for the whitetip is "jug blower" because its call is similar to the song made by blowing across the mouth of an empty bottle or jug.

Another characteristic that may help distinguish the whitetip from the white-wing is its tendency to fly less than ten feet off the ground. It appears to dislike flying and usually takes to the air only when startled. Despite its heavy body and ground-dwelling habits, its flight is swift when it heads for dense cover. Seldom is it seen above the tree tops, where the whitewings fly, but hunters have to be sure of their targets when hunting around brush or citrus groves, as both species are common to these habitats and harvest limits are specific.

The white-tipped dove has adapted so well to the citrus orchards and urban areas that it has had a dramatic population increase during the last decade. Other than citrus orchards, the whitetip also makes its home in the shady woodlands and river thickets, seeking the densest brush it can find. It is difficult to observe because of its rather secretive habits and preference for dense thickets.

Although the increase in population has slightly expanded the whitetip's range, the lower portion of Texas is still the only place in the United States where it resides. It is classed as a migratory species under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, but the Texas population is migratory only because some fly back and forth across the Rio Grande. Most spend their lives within a three-mile radius, and they prefer to walk instead of fly.

During the 1984-85 dove season, the white-tipped dove (white-fronted dove) became a legal game bird in Texas. It has been hunted for years in Mexico, but until data from studies conducted in Texas indicated it could be hunted in limited numbers without adversely affecting the breeding population, it enjoyed protected status.

 The mourning dove is the most common and abundant game bird in the United States.
Rock doves, commonly called domestic pigeons, need no introduction to city dwellers. These twelve- to thirteen-inch birds are extremely variable in color and pattern, ranging from gray to brown to all white with every combination of the three and occasional black markings. All display a white rump patch. Except when the weather is extremely hot or cold, the rock dove's distinctive oo-roo-coo or coo-roo-coo call can be heard year-round.

Their dependence upon handouts in the city and their habit of eating cattle and chicken feed in rural areas make the rock doves seem quite domestic. Few people consider them true wild birds. They generally fly in flocks and do not readily mix with other wild birds. The rock dove has been introduced into almost all parts of the world, and individuals often raise them, as well as other varieties of racing and fancy pigeons.



Another Valley resident is the red-billed pigeon. Similar in size to the domestic pigeon, this bird can be distinguished by its reddish bill. It is a high, swift flier and seeks the tallest timber and brush it can find. Except when standing on sand or gravel bars to drink, the red-billed pigeon seldom is seen on the ground. From February into August the male redbill proclaims its territory with its magnificent jungle voice. It starts with an upwelling wooooOOOO, which is quickly followed by three up-cup-a-coo's.

The redbill will fly with whitewings and easily can be misidentified. During the breeding season this pigeon is more likely to be seen singly, in pairs, or in small groups at feeding and watering places. Since the Rio Grande Valley is the redbill's only nesting ground in the United States, its population is restricted to the remaining brush and timber of the area, including some suburban areas. Serious habitat destruction, caused when large native trees are removed or killed, threatens this bird's breeding areas and its continued existence in the Lower Rio Grande Valley.

Unlike the majority of its relatives, which live at low altitudes, the band-tailed pigeon seeks the woodlands of the mountains, breeding between 5,000 and 9,000 feet. It is fairly common in the Guadalupe, Davis, Chinati, and Chisos mountains. If it were not for its preference for mountainous habitat, its tendency to alight in trees, and its yellow feet and legs, the band-tailed pigeon might be mistaken for the slightly smaller rock dove.

This bird is found singly, in pairs, or in small groups during the breeding season, but in fall and winter scattered flocks head for the foothills and open deserts in search of food. The voice of the male has a hollow, owl-like sound. Sitting on a sunny perch atop a dead tree, he hoots his call at irregular intervals in the early morning and late afternoons during the spring and summer.

If these eight species of doves and pigeons are to continue to call Texas home at least part of the year, we must all do our part to make sure their special habitats, especially the native brushlands in the Lower Rio Grande Valley, are protected and perhaps even restored. We cannot allow even one of them to follow the passenger pigeon into extinction.

A MEMBER OF THE \"OTHER\" DARK SIDE...... NV
 The addiction:
 BSA Lonestar .22 ATN Nightvision scope TKO break.
 BSA Scorpion .177 T-10 Tactical Bullbarrel Syn. stock.. TKO break
 Air Arms S400FAC .22 Custom Camo\'d stock.. By  Shadow..extra walnut stock...
 Air Arms TX200 .22 Walnut stock...
 B-20 .177 Custom camo\'d by Shadow...
 B-20 .20 ...
 B-20 .22 Custom camo\'d by Shadow...
 RWS 48 .20...
 rws 36 .20...
 Mountian Air custom .25 pcp pistol... TKO break
 Crosman 2400 18\" .22 pistol TKO break...
 Webley Tempest .22 pitol...
 Crosman 2240 .22 pistol...
 Gamo whisper .22 Wooden stock...
 Gamo CFX royal .22
 Fast deer .177 custom stock...
 Beeman GT600 .177...
 Benjamin Sheridan C-9 Blue Streak . 20 1968 model...
 Benjamin sheridan c-9 silver streak . 20
 
 


Offline shadow

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Re: My Dinner
« Reply #12 on: December 16, 2008, 10:42:33 AM »
Great!!!!!! shootin and pic's buddy, that big ol stump makes for a nice dinner table too hehehe. Ed Glad to see that your getting back after em andkeep your back healthy buddy. I ;ve been busy shootin camo etc. but the bunnies are moving now and I need to hunt, it's in my blood lol. Ed
I airgun hunt therefore I am... };)  {SHADOWS Tunes & Camo}  airguncamo@yahoo.com

Offline crazy4salmon

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RE: My Dinner
« Reply #13 on: December 16, 2008, 11:38:57 AM »
Jeff I expected to see a racoon when I opened this thread. Great shooting, and that duck farm must be the shizzle. Big bunny too.

Dan L

Offline Jaymo

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Re: My Dinner
« Reply #14 on: December 16, 2008, 12:57:40 PM »
Pigeon is nothing more than feral rock dove. dove is good eating. Ignore those who call them "rats with wings". They're just a bird. A tasty, meaty bird.
15th Battalion, Mississippi Sharpshooters, CSA.

Il buono, il cattivo, ed il brutto.

\"Mmm, bacon.\"
\"Squirrel.\"
\"Mmm, squirrel.\"