Fox calling Master class with Paddy last night

Cyres

Well-Known Member
On route home from Mid Devon last night I had arranged to go out foxing with Paddy. I duly arrived at 7.20 pm and neither of us were optimistic as it was very clear, very bright nearly full moon and just on freezing.

A short drive saw us arrive at one of Paddys perms a free range chicken farm. We parked up with a superb elevated view and at approx zero c my thermal was just remarkable and in black mode definition was superb. A quick scan revealed a very long range rabbit and a couple of rats. Silent stalking was not on, frozen puddles and sodden ground put paid to that.

Paddy started off across a very wet sloping field and the thermal revealed an abundance of ground birds identified by their calls when we sprung them Snipe +++.

We ended up in the shadow of a hedge overlooking a big field of rough grass,tussocks and a lot of snipe. Approx 200 yds away was a scrubby strip. The only positive feature was a steady light breeze from our right. Paddy set up and put out the caller 50 yds to our right and we were ready to go.

Within 2 mins we both clocked a fox coming in from the strip it was trotting in at a slightly oblique angle and as I watched it dropped dead to what turned out to be an impressive neck shot. I said pretty impressive to which Paddy said he couldn't turn the caller off so had to shoot it. Well he is honest.

A change to a distress call soon attracted 2 barn owls which quartered over the caller. Then we both saw another fox well out probably 300 yds, it came in steadily only to be distracted by 3 snipe which it didn't catch, swung back towards us and then stopped. Then I saw a bright white patch appear on the fox instantly followed by a report of the bullet strike.

Gosh I thought that was a long way out thinking it was close to 200 yds.

!0 mins of further calling produced no other customers. The first fox at 69 paces was a very big dog fox I guesstimate getting towards 20 lbs in super condition. The second was at 180 paces and would have wagered it was a vixen turned out to be a small dog fox.

So that was it 2 foxs in 1 hour on a night which we both considered to be a waste of time, clearly not and one very happy shooter, guest and chicken farmer.

I must say it was an absolutely clinical display of fox control by a guy who is an expert in his field.

For info Paddy was using a Weatherby .204 shooting 32 grn BK, Swarvi scope with a PVS with additional IR. Trigger sticks and I think a Fox Pro Scorpion but Paddy will correct if I am wrong.

D
 
Hi D
good write up thanks , what thermal were you using as I am thinking or getting one .
Jab
 
I have the pleasure of being a friend of paddy's...he very kindly agreed to be my mentor when I applied for my 223 and I've been out with him and his friend Paul on my local estate with good success...he's a true gentleman and a very skillful and dedicated foxer and hunter....I've learnt a great deal from him and his writings about foxing....if when I'm at the pearly gates and god says I can be reborn as anything I want it certainly won't be as a fox in Devon...Hugh
 
David & Hugh - thanks for the kind words!

Just a few corrections - my rifles isn't a Weatherby - it's a Kimber Montana. Oh, and I can't stand trigger sticks - mine are the Vanguard T62.

The other bits are right though - I've got a PVS-14 on the back of a Swaro Z6 with a Clive Ward Black Sun IR torch and a Pulsar thermal as a spotter.

The reason the caller wouldn't turn off when the first fox came in was that the battery in my extra mute button (which attaches to the rifle next to where my left thumb sits) had gone flat and the replacement hadn't arrived. It got here this morning together with a spare - on putting the extra one somewhere safe, I discovered the last spare one (which I thought I'd used), still sealed in its new packaging...
 
Looks like you guys had a productive evening.
I met up with David this September and he took me out for an hour and introduced me to the world of thermal.
Very impressive :)
 
Pulsar XQ 38 its a great bit of kit, also good on squirrels!!!!

Only issue is at close range narrow field of view and x3.1 standard mag is too much, 2x is plenty for spotting. So if your in the market look at the lower spec Pulsar units if your going to be using a shorter ranges or in woodland.

D
 
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