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Thread: Night time Airgun Set up Recommendation for possums

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  1. #1
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    Night time Airgun Set up Recommendation for possums

    Hi folks:

    Need some of your expertise / opinion. Just moved to a lifestyle block with bit of native bush and have already shot 2 possums wondering near the house. We have a big willow tree out front with lots of Kereru – usually when the possums are near the birds start screaming and give them away.

    Would be keen to venture into the bush when the rain stops and do a bit more hunting. Currently using a .22 Diana air rifle.

    A few options I am considering:
    (1) Spotlighting with battery pack- not so keen on this set up as bush is quite dense and not fun fumbling around cocking the airgun loading pellets at night with all these extra weight…etc. I do have a smaller torch taped to the airgun but that is not very bright for spotting / surveying

    (2) Nigh vision goggle / scope- I am keen to explore this option as the NV is much more affordable than thermal. Not sure how effective it will be though ( to spot possums VS using spot light). I am thinking of using a handheld device to survey and spot possum then walk near and use torchlight to shoot. (Some NV can also clip onto the scope if needs be). Bear in mind airguns are known to break scopes easily due to recoil- so I am not too keen on mounting NV scopes.

    (3) Thermal- I know this is probably the best option- use it to find the possum, walk near, turn on torch and shoot. But cost is too prohibitive at this stage

  2. #2
    Also known as Fingers Joe_90's Avatar
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    LED spotlight would work quite well. Cheapest option out of the 3.
    https://www.nzhuntingandshooting.co....-vision-72087/
    Those who live in glass houses, shouldn't piss off Geologists.

  3. #3
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    Also just wondering if anyone has used NV? Quite keen on this as it gives me some new toy to play during lock down . Just not sure how well it works...etc

    Sent from my SM-G988B using Tapatalk

  4. #4
    Also known as Fingers Joe_90's Avatar
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    I use a pard clip on NV unit (007a). Doing rabbit control on vineyards and fruit orchids.
    Think of it as an invisible spotlight you view through a small black and white TV, a rabbit sitting behind long grass can be hard to see without any eye reflection. For the shooting I do it works well helping to prevent the animals becoming light shy.

    There are a few threads on here discussing NV and thermal at length if you have a wee look around.
    Those who live in glass houses, shouldn't piss off Geologists.

  5. #5
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    Just bought one of these again, https://www.ebay.com/itm/284205320212?var=585694077156 fits in solarforce case or any P6 body as I dont think solarforce exists any more. spot possums long way away and shootable light very good at 50M, red wont affect your night vision and possum eyes shine nice and red, cat a bit more orange. Thermal will help to find them after spotting first as sometimes you know they are there but they look away and near impossible to spot.

  6. #6
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    O and setup, one or 2 on head and one under barrel. Head light spill show sights and barrel one show possum.

  7. #7
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    I've got a scope mounted torch for rabbit shooting ( see profile to see set up) Below is part of one of my shooting data cards and the difference between torch on gun and torch off gun aim points. This is without the angle you would use for possums in a tree
    Name:  Screenshot_20220822_202044.jpg
Views: 358
Size:  156.8 KB
    I know some of data looks skew wiff but it's actual shooting at targets at measured ranges. I've double checked it all reshooting groups and it came out the same.
    Last edited by kruza; 22-08-2022 at 09:39 PM.

  8. #8
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    makes sence really. Think of it as a car hitting the wall. You have air bag in front and a headrest at back for impact. Non air rifle rated scopes are made for the backlash, air rifle scopes need the forward impact protection. Don't care how good/expensive ya scope is, if it isn't set up to take that forward impact a high power springer is going to break it. Gone are the days of a 22lr fixed 4x scope for ya air rifle.

  9. #9
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    Try to shoot them under the chin..that's a kill shot every time!
    Micky Duck likes this.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ranger 888 View Post
    Try to shoot them under the chin..that's a kill shot every time!
    through chin up through the swede -weeeee look ma its jacko imitating an open boiled egg!did it once with a big buck nailed him x5out of me trusty TOz17 .bugger wouldnt fall out of tree -righto out comes trusty .303 as a chainsaw -nup his tail relaxed and he landed in a shower of blood and crap right on bonnet of my car .cranium was sparkling wehite apart from a rather ragged hole through the base!

  11. #11
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    Get a good torch with a good mount and see how it works for you. You have to spend a lot more to get any major advantage. Yes thermal (have a handheld) and nv is great but a spotlight had worked for the past ..... Years

    For night shooting I use a maxtorch and the figure 8 clamp (but having a dog that tells you which tree to look up saves needing to get the thermal out)
    Micky Duck likes this.

  12. #12
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    Bloody good torch on that. Looks as bright as daylight. Must be big! Throw ya aim point out.?

  13. #13
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    Thermal clipon on a compac doctor scope on slug guns.Great fun on the bunnies.Not cheap tho.Name:  20210909_181709.jpg
Views: 1236
Size:  700.5 KB

  14. #14
    Member hotbarrels's Avatar
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    Thermal and NV are not a good solution in bush. The IR reflections will render NV useless. Small low power thermal spotter may be of use, but its a lot of money when a torch will do the job.
    Get a good head lamp for spotting and a rifle mounted torch for the kill shot.
    Growlybear and timattalon like this.

  15. #15
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    man you fellas are spoilt...
    Ive shot litterally hundreds of possums with a big jim torch and or a dolphin torch...those were heavy 6 volt jobbies and batteries werent rechargable.
    ANY torch will do the job...possums arent hard to find,and once up trees stay there. you dont need a $200 torch to find possums in willow tree near your home...go out now on full moon and silhouette them....once leaves take off its too late.
    head torch to walk with and handheld for looking around... shoot them in the V of throat if you can...or through chest if side on...your 22 airgun may have enough grunt for head shots,chest works but takes few seconds to kill them.
    Ftx325, Barry the hunter and OGM like this.

 

 

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