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november

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About november

  • Rank
    Born Hunter
  • Birthday 31/03/1983

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    hannover/germany
  1. enlighten me... I guess he hasn't noticed you are in Germany. No pistols in the UK! Oh yes there are, you just don't get the free right to roam with them. you can have a .22 or 410 pitol on you fac for dispatch...November you must be so proud of that pic...maybe get it framed Ya, maybe I'll hang it next to the pic of your mom from your avatar..
  2. theories are: - the black dots could be the breathing holes of hypoderminae, (forgive me using the latin term but I have no idea what the english term is and the german Hautdassel is not very helpful I reckon) and this is very itchy so basically the lost hair is from scratching and rubbing onto something - mange.. although I don't think it is mange because the skin is not really crusted - there is a theory that this might be due to a lack of cadmium which causes the winter hair to break
  3. nope, i shot it saturday and university of veterinary medicine here in hannover reopened just today, a bit too late to have it examined. I do have a few theories but they're not really based on anything scientific..
  4. I knew this buck from my trail camera and decision was made to take this one if opportunity presents itself to avoid whatever it might be to spread among the others. (left one) well, a few days ago while driving through my area I spotted it in a meadow, roughly 180meters away. not very spectacular, I got out of the car, loaded my anschütz .222, flipped open the harris, inhale, exhale, inhale, exhale, boom. Not sure what exactly that is...
  5. Dark fallow deer is quite common, I was talking about ROE deer
  6. I was just wondering, do you guys have black roe deer in the UK?! I have a few around here:
  7. When does your season run to and what season do you have for does? roe buck 1st of may - 15th of oct. fawns and does 1st of sept - 31st of jan. yearling does (what's the correct english term for that?) 1st of sept - 31st of jan. and also 1st + 31st of may
  8. Anschütz in .222, Steyr Pro Hunter in .308 and since christmas this one: Sauer 202 in .308 with a 20" SSG3000 barrel, with Meopta 3-12x56 on Recknagel Picatinnyrail, Harris BiPod.. well, I'm satisfied so far: can't wait for roebuck season to open may 1st
  9. The sticking a knife in the back of the head method is called "abnicken" in German, was taught a long time as a great method and all but the opinion changed during the last 10-20 years. It is quite difficult to find the correct spot and apply the blade on a dead animal, if the animal is still alive, it is even harder. To illustrate the method: the wounded animal is in distress and I don't see why you would want to increase that by poking around and ending up like this: methods like slitting the throat are just shit and in my opinion unethical as the animal suffers longer than nee
  10. Nope, I can pretty much tell the difference between a mute swan (which I am allowed to hunt) and other swans by looking at the beak. The difference is actually that obvious, that I considered your post at first as a joke not worth answering but then realized that you really don't know the difference. And no, I completely do not see your point, why I should not post something perfectly legal on an open forum. Maybe, if your mate's wife is having a look at the list, have her translate all of it. You could then just let me know what other game you consider inappropriate for me to post her
  11. Have you seen, what a flock of 100 geese does to canola? Go figure, what 100 swans do. but ...........................................While the whooper swan currently appears to have a stable population, the Northwest European population of the Bewick’s swan, is thought to be in decline. Both species have long been protected throughout their migratory ranges by national and international legislation (e.g. the EU Birds Directive and the African-Eurasian Waterbird Agreement). Don't see, how whooper and tundra swans are related to the mute swan I shot... enlighten me oh and as to yo
  12. I use only breasts and legs, so a broad side shot which goes in just above the breast is just fine. Also, a swan is not much resistance to the bullet so it does not really start deformation/defragmentation. When there is a lot of wind, I shoot geese with the .308 and a cheap 170grain softpoint bullet, works just fine. Usually I use my .222 for geese. But - as with all other animals - shot placement is the deciding factor when it comes to damage to the meat. You just have to know, what you're doing Range on this one was 183 meters - that explains why wind is a problem for the .222 and why a s
  13. Have you seen, what a flock of 100 geese does to canola? Go figure, what 100 swans do.
  14. Bummer. Any specific reason for that?
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