It takes 43 muscle's to frown and 17 to smile, but only 3 for proper trigger pull.
What more do we need? If we are above ground and breathing the rest is up to us!
Rule 1: Treat every firearm as loaded
Rule 2: Always point firearms in a safe direction
Rule 3: Load a firearm only when ready to fire
Rule 4: Identify your target beyond all doubt
Rule 5: Check your firing zone
Rule 6: Store firearms and ammunition safely
Rule 7: Avoid alcohol and drugs when handling firearms
Not a small one.
4.75kg. Easily by far the biggest possum I’ve ever shot.
Just...say...the...word
Lots of big rabbits about at the moment.
Experience. What you get just after you needed it.
Destructive little bastards
It takes 43 muscle's to frown and 17 to smile, but only 3 for proper trigger pull.
What more do we need? If we are above ground and breathing the rest is up to us!
Rule 1: Treat every firearm as loaded
Rule 2: Always point firearms in a safe direction
Rule 3: Load a firearm only when ready to fire
Rule 4: Identify your target beyond all doubt
Rule 5: Check your firing zone
Rule 6: Store firearms and ammunition safely
Rule 7: Avoid alcohol and drugs when handling firearms
Just another day in the office Bradley.
110 Te Moana Road, Waikanae, just next to the north bound off ramp.
Clearly those rabbits couldn't read the WARNING POISON PINDONE sign!
Thought I'd try out the Arken Zulus capabilities, and took to the backyard without turning the IR on. Full moon provides more than enough light.
Thoroughly impressed.
@chopsuey I don't know the history of the area well enough to know, but the paddocks are dead flat so might have been market garden at some stage. They are the first paddocks west of the Waikanae, north bound off ramp. Transit bought a lot of land for the Expressway. The sections east of the Expressway were on a 45 degree angle to the Expressway which cut them in half, so now there is part of a section on both sides of the Expressway.
Very funny 30.06king. Those signs are put up by Greater Wellington Regional Council. They put out 50kg on one drop and it was all gone the next day, but I still shot 75! Go figure!? I didn't eat any of those rabbits, they got dug into a vege garden for fertilizer.
Perhaps the sign should say, "DANGER! LEAD POISON!"
Thanks @Hugh Shields
Wellington Regional Council would have done better by not wasting money on Pindone and buying ammo to give you instead. I'm sure overall results would be better.
I'm no expert but in my very limited experience I don't think Pindone is very effective in killing relatively well fed Rabbits. But a Hornet bullet to the body or head is a different matter !
@30-06king Agreed! I'm always up for free ammunition!
I have an on-going discussion with GWRC, who know that I do not agree with their practice of shooting areas once every year, or two yearly, or five yearly. It is easy to brag that, "We shot 600 rabbits!" on a Public Lands area, where the Public are excluded from shooting. Recently a recreational shooter was arrested for culling rabbits on the rabbit infested, Skyline Walkway, which falls under Wellington City Council Pest Control. The WCC sub-contract GWRC to do the shooting.
By contrast my nightly tallies on one specific property have gone; 157, 60 -70, 20 - 30, 8 or 10. Where once they had NO GRASS, they now have grass up to their knees! I've shot 2,200 rabbits on that property and I still go back every 3 or 4 weeks. That's what I offer, rabbit eradication, NOT having a Whoppy Shoot every year or two.
Pindone? Yeah, nah? The jury is out. The results are not quantifiable. Pindone dissolves in the rain, or even a heavy frost. It requires rabbits not being bait shy and eating a lethal amount. I think Pindone carrots work better than green pallets. But I still shot 75 on that pindone poisoned property.....drwa your own conclusions.......
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