Helicopter coyote hunt

shoots_5

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May 15, 2009
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I had an amazing opportunity with a rancher friend of mine who invited me to help him with some predator control and go shoot coyotes from a helicopter.....i of course jumped at the chance! I'm not sure I've ever done anything more fun! Took a few rounds on the first one to establish the right lead but after that it was game on. Was using a benneli semi auto 12 gauge with #4 buck shot. We ended up getting 18 in a little over 2hours of flight time. It was amazing to me after seeing some of the areas we busted coyotes out of to realize how little cover they need to hide and how close they were hanging to some of the ranch houses. It was seriously more fun than should be allowed! I think I could get used to being a door gunner..... :twisted:
 

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If I ever get to go again (which I sincerely hope I will) I need to find a goPro camera or 2 to mount up on the gun or helicopter or both! That pilot does some fun stuff with the helicopter when the dogs start zig zagging around trying to escape the strange death creature flying above them!

I split the flight time with another shooter and while they were flying they found a very big 4x4 mule deer buck bedded down with 2 coyotes sitting not far from him watching him. After taking care of the 2 coyotes they looked back at the buck trotting away and got to see him lose one of his antlers....pretty cool deal.

There are some pretty good videos of others doing the same thing if you search coyote helicopter hunt on youtube. It's a pretty good deal for the ranchers in the area. County pays half of the flight time and the rancher pays the other half. Part of a subsidized predator depredation deal.
 
Oh man, that would be a blast.
Thanks for sharing the pictures and story.

JD338
 
Those hogs and dogs sure do turn on the afterburners. Great sport. The size of a couple of those sounders is pretty impressive.
 
That might be enough to entice me back in to a helicopter. :)
Looks like a blast. I'm glad you got to do it and took the time to share it with us.

Vince

Sent from my SGH-M919 using Tapatalk
 
Have recently acquired permission from a landowner in Ok to hunt his 3k acre ranch.
Turns out he makes the majority of his living flying a helicopter doing controlled burns and aerial spraying.
He also has numerous landowners paying him to fly their property and eliminate the hogs.
Here in the next few weeks we're going on a hunt with him.
His advice, a 12 ga shotgun and OO buck.
In two days last week he and a couple of his hands killed 340 hogs in the area around Clarksville, Tx.
 
Holy smokes! That's a lot of trigger time! Ya I would think OO buck would work well for hogs. I used the #4 buck shot for coyotes. A few more projectiles to throw at them. Seemed to work real well on the dogs out here. You'll have to let us know how it went if you get to go! You won't regret it.....
 
It's looks exciting, I have seen several videos and it looks like great fun. However after having spent hundreds of hours of flight time in helicopters, with a couple of close calls, while directing fire suppression efforts, I had to promise my wife that I would fly "only when necessary". I don't believe this sport would meet that criteria. I still think it looks like great fun.!!!!!
 
shoots_5":2lsy5byr said:
Holy smokes! That's a lot of trigger time! Ya I would think OO buck would work well for hogs. I used the #4 buck shot for coyotes. A few more projectiles to throw at them. Seemed to work real well on the dogs out here. You'll have to let us know how it went if you get to go! You won't regret it.....

Roger that. We're planning on taking a Go Pro camera and videoing the whole thing.
After patterning some buckshot out of my Benelli last weekend I may take an AR 15 instead, not sure


Elkman":2lsy5byr said:
It's looks exciting, I have seen several videos and it looks like great fun. However after having spent hundreds of hours of flight time in helicopters, with a couple of close calls, while directing fire suppression efforts, I had to promise my wife that I would fly "only when necessary". I don't believe this sport would meet that criteria. I still think it looks like great fun.!!!!!

My wife isn't real thrilled either.
I was a Huey helo crew chief in the Army in my younger days and have spent several hundred hours in the air myself. Looking forward to the smell of burnt JP5 as we'll be in a Bell LongRanger
 
HTDUCK":38i91s1n said:
Roger that. We're planning on taking a Go Pro camera and videoing the whole thing.
After patterning some buckshot out of my Benelli last weekend I may take an AR 15 instead, not sure
I have shot 100s of hogs from a helicopter with an AR. That is my firearm of choice for the application. A red dot or holographic sight makes a BIG difference over open sights. I would not use magnified optics. Quick target acquisition with a moving target and moving shooting platform makes it near impossible with magnification.

Now, it is a different story with coyotes and piglets. Shotguns seem to be the way to go for these critters. Coyotes dart around like crazy. When we are after coyotes, we usually try to approach from behind them to, hopefully, minimize the zig and zag. A .223 bullet will often blow right through piglets, making you think you missed. Shotguns work best for them, as well.

Be prepared to get on a roll, and then hit a slump where you can't seem to hit anything. It is easy to get over confident and rush your shot, especially when you know you have several rounds left in a magazine. Which brings up another point. Change mags often. Otherwise, you may run out of ammo when you have hogs lined up in a straight line for the perfect shot. :mrgreen: I learned this the hard way.
 
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