28 squirrels, the correct pair of trousers and too many deer.

Three Sundays ago, around ten O'clock in the evening, I came home from a damp, drizzly afternoon in Oxfordshire with Willie_Gunn, where I had attempted to erase the shame of my failed foray after roebucks in June, for which I had failed to wake up at 3am as planned. As the train approached my destination, the skies turned leaden, a few drops of rain started to fall. As we returned to the Bluebell Wood - which I am sure has a name, but that's how my mind has catalogued it - the wind rose too, the trees started swaying, and it was all looking quite unappealing for furry wildlife. Still, we persevered, and around half an hour before sunset, W_G spotted a single muntjac through the murk, on the opposite side of a field. We made our way downhill and around, trying to creep around it, checking every so often that it was still there, which became harder as I kept having dry the lenses of my binoculars and couldn't quite tell whether the focus was poorly adjusted or whether I was just looking through water and low-light drizzle. Nature decided for us though, as by the time we arrived, it had gone. We waited at the end of a ride for any passing muntjac for a further half an hour, but I started to lose the ability to see through my 1960s scope, my jeans were soaking wet and then it was dark. On the way back, W_G suggested we try again before the end of the month and the close of the roebuck season. As a result, I did not write up this outing in my shooting diary, hoping that the second half of it would make for a better story.


Three weeks later, Storm Brian had been blowing. We only caught the edge of it in London, but it was windy and wet enough that I hadn't see the flicker of a grey squirrel's tail in the garden for three or four days. But on the Sunday morning, the wind abated, the clouds parted once in a while, and I spotted a squirrel running along the fence. Domestic duties prevented me from reaching for the air rifle, but my Squirrel Barometer was showing wildlife movement again, which boded well. Even better, I found that I had my 28th squirrel of the year caught in my vegetable patch cage trap: you may laugh at my suburban reconnaissance technique, but we must learn to read our environment! Of course on its own, watching squirrels is insufficient preparation. What I really needed were some proper stalking trousers, and so on the Friday I had headed to Decathlon in Canada Water where, after grumbling for half an hour that they didn't actually stock any of the Solognac hunting range advertised on their website, I spotted the giant sign that said "More sports upstairs: gold, hunting, petanque etc". So on Sunday, suitably kitted out in proper stalking trousers and equipped with readings from the Squirrel Barometer, I headed back out to a different patch of ground. This time, the forecast was correct, the sun came out, the wind died down, and after a few days huddled under cover, the deer came out.

2017-10-23_10-50-48 by pinemarten, on Flickr


We stalked over a hill and down onto a ride where W_G slowed to his trademark glacial pace, and with good reason: at the bottom of the slope, he spotted a little muntjac buck just inside the wood. At first it responded to the Buttolo, then ran off up the slope. We waited for a further fifteen minutes or so, and it reappeared, head perched up high, trying to ascertain what we were. With the drilling up on the sticks I tracked it, but two branches were waving in front of it. W_G whispered to me to slowly edge a metre or so to the left where he had a clear view. I did so and sure enough, the muntjac was still there, still peering unseeingly towards us, at an angle but offering a shot. I placed the thick post of the reticle on the front of its' right shoulder to take account of the angle, squeezed and BANG! Off it ran to the right, about ten metres, before collapsing behind a stand of trees.

2017-10-22_08-06-27 by pinemarten, on Flickr

I fumbled around in my pocket for another cartridge (I need to improve this), and we headed into the wood. There it lay, about thirty metres away, in some brambles.

IMAG3174 by pinemarten, on Flickr

After a somewhat messy gralloch due to the bullet entering as planned and travelling diagonally through the deer, we decided to keep stalking. After all, I have no idea when I'll have another good chance and Artemis seemed to be smiling on us that day.


At the edge of the wood we came upon grass field which we glassed for a while. I spotted a grey brown hump at the crest of the hill but dismissed it as a log. Five minutes later, W_G said he'd spotted a roebuck: it was the log. It turned out to be accompanied by at least three female logs. There was no safe shot, we were too far and the wind was all wrong. But we decided to try and walk around the field and approach it from the other side. While we were working out our cunning plan, another muntjac buck appeared right where our planned approach would have taken us. He too had female company! So, did I want to keep trying for the roebuck, or take the muntjac? Well here was a dilemma I'd never had before! I had no answers! I mean, that muntjac was broadside on, oblivious, maybe a hundred metres away, an easy prone shot. But then, I already had one in the bag. And if I was going to take the trouble to take another deer home and do all the larder work, messing up my domestic environment in the process, it was going to be a roebuck. At which point, Artemis decided I'd had my chance and switched the lights off.


Once again, I'd like to thank Willie_Gunn for his invitations, eyes, and guiding. I look forward to returning for a stalk at Bluebell Time. Also, next time a shot like that presents itself, with a stock-still deer at thirty metres, I will shoot it in the neck. I'm not a novice anymore an that was pretty unpleasant lardering work. And maybe I should have taken that second muntjac. But maybe it's best not to fill the freezer too much so that I have a decent excuse to come back. Oh, and wear the right trousers, and watch the squirrels.

IMAG3176 by pinemarten, on Flickr
 
Nice write up and well done on bagging a tasty muntjac. That's a lot more than I have seen let alone shot!

Next year remember October is the month for Surrey chamois.

Cheers

K
 
Next year remember October is the month for Surrey chamois.

Cheers

K

I didn't forget, I'm afraid that it just always seems to coincide with a time of year when I'm not available. This year I'd only just returned from a week on business at the ends of the Earth so was needed at home rather than in the Surrey Alps.
 
Are you using a single shot musket? Good write up. and never wear jeans shooting.
P.S can you fill a freezer with a muntjac:)
 
Nice write up

Keep a round between your fingers ? Use a Velcro or tie on cheek piece with a side for holding rounds ?

Paul
 
Are you using a single shot musket? Good write up. and never wear jeans shooting.

I'm using my trusty J. P. Sauer drilling in 7x57R with 150gr bonded hollowpoint bullets. They tend to make a bit of a mess of muntjac at close ranges which is the case of the last two. And you're right about the jeans, it's just that my Le Chameau trousers are quilted (I bought them for wildfowling) and far too warm for the South. I recommend these: [h=1]SOLOGNAC INVERNESS 300 HUNTING TROUSERS - GREEN[/h]
P.S can you fill a freezer with a muntjac:)

Not with this one, no. I managed to salvage two haunches, one shoulder, and the backstraps. The rest was a horrible mess.
 
Well done Lawrence ,ive seen so many Munty,s at night out foxing it would be loverly to take 1 home in daylight for the freezer . And Well done to both of you for keeping at it ,no doubt you,l be listing a deliceous recipe soon :thumb:
 
[...]no doubt you,l be listing a deliceous recipe soon :thumb:

Well since you ask so nicely: muntjac medallions with a cognac sauce, the last beans from the garden, and the useless crop of "baby" (i.e. tiny) beetroot, roasted with thyme, garlic, bay leaves and olive oil.
ccf28b9411d24f3889d7b998d437077e.jpg
 
Well since you ask so nicely: muntjac medallions with a cognac sauce, the last beans from the garden, and the useless crop of "baby" (i.e. tiny) beetroot, roasted with thyme, garlic, bay leaves and olive oil.
ccf28b9411d24f3889d7b998d437077e.jpg
Ohh a wish it was lunch time now. Thanks PM:drool:
 
Thanks for the write-up, PM, and congratulations on a successful stalk.

I wouldn't worry about not shooting: take knowing the buck could have been in the bag as a mark of good field-craft not of poor decision making.(Positive rationalisations are the best ones!)

Re. keeping a second cartridge handy, Askari do a felt fore-end protector that holds 4 in elastic loops, and smaller leather holders called "blitz-etui" are available from several continental suppliers, such as this one:
Blitz Patronenetui - Kugel | JagdFIEBER.com

Happy hunting!

(Your "squirrel barometer" is a fine invention that should be of benefit to hunters and outdoorsmen everywhere... I sense a Nobel in the offing.)
 
You sir are a true Frenchman ,a simple but flaversome meal made from bits and dregs but looks absolutely amazing:drool:

Merci Monsieur Tozzyfesses! The beetroot thing was just because I had the most useless crop of them ever, but I found a recipe in Hugh FW's Veg book for baby beetroot that looked good. The thing is that he specified that these were beetroot "about the size of a golf ball". My largest one was not quite that big. The result was that by the time I'd cleaned, trimmed, cooked and peeled all these micro-beetroot it was almost 10pm. It took longer to prepare them than to skin and butcher the muntjac! So was that worth the effort? I think I'll not bother with beetroot next year. Mrs PM doesn't even like them much.
 
Thanks for the write-up, PM, and congratulations on a successful stalk.

I wouldn't worry about not shooting: take knowing the buck could have been in the bag as a mark of good field-craft not of poor decision making.(Positive rationalisations are the best ones!)

Absolutely, what you said, that's exactly why I didn't shoot it! Quite seriously though, there is also the time it takes to take a deer from the shed to the freezer. That's all time when I'm in practice away from home. And besides, this way I can justify heading back out for roe does in November!

and smaller leather holders called "blitz-etui" are available from several continental suppliers, such as this one:
Blitz Patronenetui - Kugel | JagdFIEBER.com

There you go, there's my solution, thanks!

(Your "squirrel barometer" is a fine invention that should be of benefit to hunters and outdoorsmen everywhere... I sense a Nobel in the offing.)

Yes, I think it's pretty good although a blunt instrument. That said, I'm still not able to have a look at the squirrel barometer and go stalking if the conditions are good, but it's nice to have some inkling of what's going on.
 
I always approve of catch and release stalking. You could have taken it but chose not to. To my mind pulling the trigger is just a very small part of the whole game. But equally there are times when stalking is very easy, other times when it is very difficult, so at times the easy shots should be taken, to make up for all the blanks.
 
We ended up having to use half our beetroot crop when they were half grown this year...a roe doe visitor managed to get under the deer proof cover and harvested them by selectively eating the tops but hoiking the beets out of the ground in the process.

Only a few days more until I can sit out to see if I can recoup the nutrients, she and her follower are still around!

Alan
 
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