Foxy Five

A fifth fox has been harassing my boys’ chickens and rabbits for some time. The first four were dealt with without any real trouble, but this one has made a fool of me. I have lost plenty of sleep over it: not through worry, but through fruitless nights in the chair. He is shy, inconsistent, and astonishingly quick, typically spending less than 30 seconds between entering and leaving. Some nights there is nothing at all, then the following night he will appear five times.
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I left out a spread of bait, including dead rats as they dropped, squirrels, rabbits, and a few old pheasant bones. The first trail camera triggers an alarm to wake me, and I then have to come fully to my senses and get the rifle into the fight before he slips away once again.

The neighbouring farmer is a decent bloke, but it is arable land and he does not want foxes shot on his ground because of local antis, so for this battle I am confined to my own boundaries. At these close ranges, on a moving target, the thermal spotter is no use, and my 16 mm Pard with the Hawke’s 4× base magnification leaves me starting at around 6×, with a postage-stamp field of view.

To make matters a little more sporting, the old Pard is only showing the central portion of an already small image, from an older budget scope, sitting on a Brno Model 2 .22LR. Sixty-odd years old and still doing her job.

Eventually, patience paid off. As soon as the fox reached the kill zone, marked with a simple cane, a single subsonic hollow point dropped him where he stood. I thought I’d piece some of the footage together if it is of any interest, with music added to smooth the jarring transitions.

 
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It had been reassuringly quiet on the trail cameras, albeit still running around an hour out for BST, as the spring vegetation grew. Then, over the last week, the foxes suddenly started to appear again.

A friend of mine farms neighbouring land and confirmed that they had also noticed fresh fox prints in the mud, after a quiet period following my late winter cull. Both of us keep chickens and have an interest in protecting ground-nesting birds in the area.

A rabbit was tethered to the kill spot, and I also tried Jall55’s suggestion from yesterday of scattering a few dog biscuits around the area. The kibble worked surprisingly well at keeping the foxes steady and interested. The second fox was completely unconcerned, feeding over the body of its dead mate.

Not the best image quality through the Pard, but both were cleanly dispatched: one with a shot to the back of the skull and the other through the ear hole. I really do need to invest in a thermal, or perhaps a dedicated digital NV setup for the old Brno Model 2, which was running Winchester Super-X subsonic hollow points.

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These were foxes six and seven. The first four…

 
I'm a big fan of dog biscuits / kibble for holding them in an area. I have a similar "out the bedroom window" setup here, albeit over the wall in a neighbours field so shots are in the 100-150yd range. A handful of Bakers Meaty Chunks in front of the trailcam usually holds them long enough for me to get the rifle out and get in position.
 
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