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A Kentucky Squirrel Hunt

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Location
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I took off from work yesterday (10/27/17) and headed for the woods to try out the new early-Lancaster rifle I’d just finished the night before. The weather was forecast to be cool and partly cloudy with a bit of a breeze. There was a good-sized creek draining into Taylorsville Lake that I’ve meant to explore for several years and made the decision to finally do so.

Actually, I’d only gotten the rifle ready to shoot that morning. The hickory ramrod I’d originally ordered from TOTW came in perfectly straight grained except for a section right in the middle where the grain ran completely out from one side to the other in 9-3/4 inches! I suppose it will make good dowel pins, but there’s no way I would try using that on a rifle. I ordered a replacement of their ramin wood and received it the night before. While straight grained, it was ovate in cross section and wouldn’t fit my thimbles, so I was up at 2:00am scraping, sanding, and cutting a jag on one end of it.

The eastern sky was beginning to grey when I arrived at the bridge, enough so that I had sufficient light to kit up without overlooking anything. I slipped into the woods and began the process of casting off the worries, concerns, and trivialities of settlement living. After only a few minutes cruising through the woods, I was out of earshot of the bridge and the slipping backward in time began in earnest. Stopping to load the rifle and check over my gear yet again, the sounds of the forest washed over me. The world felt right for a change.

It was easy to see this forest had been timbered in the recent past. The trees were generally quite small and similar in size. The state of our once-magnificent forests makes me sad. I’ll always wonder how this place looked before white man penetrated it and began the endless, greedy consumption that has left the state covered in these saplings. One of the great hopes I carry on any of these scouts is that I’ll stumble across one of the old giants that, for whatever reason, avoided the axe.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_075925847 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]

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[/url]IMG_20171027_080000641 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


This puffball mushroom stood out quite dramatically among the forest litter.

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[/url]IMG_20171015_103742169 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


Deer trails cut to and fro throughout this area. They had chopped this creek bank into mud from all the use!

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[/url]IMG_20171027_080311085 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


Finally making my way down to the creek, I paused to listen to the water babbling over this riffle.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_081902204 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


(continued below)
 
Sounds like a good day in the woods, except for the misfire. The first time I ever pulled the trigger on a deer I got the same result, click a puff of smoke and no bang. She turned,looked at me than bounded off.

For years now I swab out the bore and wipe down the flintlock with a patch soaked in alcohol. Then wipe dry with a clean patch. I do this the night before a trip to the range or a hunt. I have yet to have a misfire on the first shot since.
 
fistmil said:
For years now I swab out the bore and wipe down the flintlock with a patch soaked in alcohol. Then wipe dry with a clean patch. I do this the night before a trip to the range or a hunt. I have yet to have a misfire on the first shot since

An excellent practice and one I should've done, but managed to completely overlook it. That little gray "died" twice and didn't even know it!
 
Sorry guys, but I'm in the process of migrating from Photobucket to Flickr and sharing images from Flickr is a bit different. Hence the mostly image free state of my initial post. Changing out all the image codes exceeded this site's time limit to edit, and there you go. Following SHOULD BE the rest of the post with its correct images in place. We'll see...


I can’t look at a piece of work like this and not wonder what on earth was that beaver thinking? You and all your beaver friends can’t move it or eat it! This tree stood about thirty yards from the creek and had fallen away from the stream bed, so this was probably young beavers engaging in vandalism, right? I hope they got in trouble.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_083623253 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


Here are two of the small feeders to the main creek channel. They’re mostly dry now, but a little rain will bring them to life.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_085702944 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]

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[/url]IMG_20171027_085720463 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


This fellow looks as though he’s considering the upcoming hibernation, but I’d suggest burrowing a bit deeper. Then again, who knows more about being a box terrapin, me or this guy/gal?

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[/url]IMG_20171027_091510664 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


I finally saw a squirrel! A little gray was sitting at the end of a downed log working over a nut of some kind. The rifle was cocked as it drifted up to my shoulder. The sights aligned and settled on the squirrel’s head. I pressed the trigger and got the satisfying “clack-poof” of the pan lighting up, but without the anticipated BOOM that should’ve turned the squirrel into breakfast. The squirrel ran about fifteen feet back up the log as I primed the pan for another easy shot. Clack-poof again. At that, the squirrel headed out to visit relatives in West Virginia and I decided to do some impromptu gun work. There may have been some oil left on the breechface or some such, because I soon had the rifle up and running and had no additional issues.

I can work with this...

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[/url]IMG_20171027_101350115 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


Coming around a little bend in the feeder creek I was exploring , this came into view!

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[/url]IMG_20171027_101835563 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


With a girth of 180 inches measured four and a half feet up the trunk, this red oak likely sprouted in the 1780’s. I couldn’t confirm it until getting back to civilization, but my new rifle had leaned against the trunk of what is likely a genuine 18th century oak! I wonder what all this tree has seen over the years?

As the squirrel activity was nearly nonexistent, I had been keeping an eye out for other game. One of my great uncles taught me young to be on the lookout for these “boles” where tree-dwelling animals sometimes bed. Seeing this one off the trail, I moved to higher ground to take a peek. Well, looky there!

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[/url]IMG_20171027_102138598 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


Raising no small amount of ruckus stirred the coon from her slumber and just as I snapped this photo, it dawned on me that raccoon season opened October first. She scurried on up the tree and began using that squirrel trick of keeping the tree’s trunk between us.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_102400848 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


After a couple of wide laps around the tree with no success, I executed an angular flanking maneuver that’s worked well in past. Instead of continuing to circle, I’ll move in a straight line just beside the trunk and come out behind the animal, hopefully getting a shot off. This worked perfectly on the coon, as I found her looking at where I had been and with no clue I was behind her and raising the rifle. Getting noggin-clocked with a .440” PRB will flat bring a coon down to ground level.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_103929014 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


As I wiped and reloaded, I was already having that internal discussion: Baked with sweet potatoes, roasted with vegetables, or BBQ’d?

Here are a few random photos I took on the hike back out.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_111708261 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]

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[/url]IMG_20171027_111719138 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]

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[/url]IMG_20171027_112413792 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


Nearing the top of the ridge that led out to my truck, I paused for a rest. Had to have another raccoon/rifle pic.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_114835995 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


Noticed a sawbriar had gotten me pretty good on the way up the hill. That’s some awfully bright blood.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_114915681 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


I threw my ”˜hawk a few times while resting. That’s always fun!

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[/url]IMG_20171027_115240650 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


Leaning against a tree, I turned to my left and saw this dead honey locust off to the side. These are nasty. I drove one through my foot as a youngster and can assure you, no part of that resembled fun.

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[/url]IMG_20171027_115635761 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]

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[/url]IMG_20171027_115547049 by ghostdncr, on Flickr[/img]


I’ve always heard you could estimate the severity of the coming winter by reading certain signs in the natural world. You know, like the ratio of black to brown on a wooley worm or the density of a certain animal’s undercoat? If a raccoon’s body fat is any representation, many of us will not survive the upcoming winter. I’m absolutely certain that I’ve never seen such a butterball of a coon as this one, with the next closest competitor only carrying about half as much!
 
I enjoyed your hunt, and the pictures. That country looks mighty familiar. :grin:

Spence
 
George said:
I enjoyed your hunt, and the pictures. That country looks mighty familiar. :grin:

Spence

I'll just bet it does! Thanks for the kind words and I'm glad you enjoyed the post. Are you in reasonable proximity to Taylorsville Lake? You and I are more than a little blessed to call the Middle Ground home. I never tire of sitting in these woods and considering the history I'm surrounded by.
 
I'm in Louisville, but i've fished and sailed some on Taylorsville Lake.

Spence
 
J. Williams said:
I never tire of sitting in these woods and considering the history I'm surrounded by.
Yeah, back when I was first starting in the little bit of reenacting I do, everyone was all hot to be a western mountain man, so I started in that direction. Then, one day I said to myself, self, only an idjit would do mountain man when living in the middle of the historical Kentucky frontier. So I shifted gears and never looked back. It's very special to live in a place where it is literally possible you are putting your foot where those old ones put theirs.

Spence
 
I'm in Louisville ("the settlement") as well, and find Taylorsville to be a welcome respite.

Currently working on the coon barbecue and happy to report things are going famously! Supper will be around five o'clock, if any of you would like to swing by...
 
Congratulations on a successful hunt, went after squirrel and came back with a raccoon, LOL. Your photos remind me of the area I grew up in, in Indiana. The leaf on the tree, where you first saw the squirrel, looks like a Chestnut Oak leaf. Keep yer powder dry.......robin :bow:
 
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I have a horrible time trying to identify my oaks, even after so many years in these woods. The round-lobed leaves are white oaks, and the spikey ones are reds. This much I've learned and work slowly forward from there. :thumbsup:
 
I love you story and those awesome photos, thanks. Gotta say, too, that your rifle sure looks good.
 
Come visit Texas...confuse you with a few more varieties! :wink: Great story and wonderful pics. You've got a grand attitude for an outdoors. Often it's the day and location, critters be damned! :thumbsup: For couple minor wounds you got a juicy coon doing the BBQ bit and a great hide for making you Davy Crockett hat...which it now appears he never wore! :rotf:

All us Williams boys got to stick together. Hope you're not from my line though. Mine passed through your area headed to Iowa, of all places, and only came to Texas because land speculators showed them photos of sides of beef hanging from rafter ends and told them the air is south Texas was so salty it preserved meat! Sold the farm and came on down...just in time for the 1900 hurricane! Makes me so proud!! :rotf: Now I know why one of my NASA pals had no interest in checking out his family tree! His actual comment, "Got no interest. Figure they're all hanging off it by their necks or their tails!" Looks like my gang was from tails! :shake: :doh:
 
Wes/Tex said:
Come visit Texas...confuse you with a few more varieties!

I've noticed in my research that Texas has numerous varieties of oak that are unique to the general area. As much trouble as I have positively identifying our local species, it appears I'd be utterly lost in your neck of the woods! I try to turn every day afield into a grand adventure and looking for the old trees seems to add a great deal to these forays. My father's side of the family landed in Virginia in the mid-1700's and made almost immediately for Kentucky, where we've been ever since. I have found scant information on my mother's side, though.



smo said:
How was the Coon? Oven cooked or pit?

I boiled it for about thirty minutes in salted water with about 3/4 cup of apple cider vinegar to remove any remaining fat. I've found that while coon fat looks very much like pork fat, it is in no way fit to eat. The fat should be removed with the same attention to detail given to removing those FOUR scent glands. Make sure you get all four unless you wish to ruin the whole thing and join the ranks who think coon meat ranks right up there with possum or starling meat! After the boiling, I tossed it into the crock pot with some spices for about two and a half hours before pulling it, then added a light coating of sweet BBQ sauce and simmered for another thirty minutes. It was good stuff! I gave small morsels to my dog and cat and have never seen either so excited about what I was eating.
 
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