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NitroXAdministrator
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A bit of crop protection
      #251381 - 01/08/14 06:49 AM



Some crop protection. Rabbits cause a lot of damage to my oaten hay crop, so need some thinning out.




Blitzen guarding the rabbits. He thinks they are his, but I think otherwise. I used my Mauser M03 in .222 Remington. Shots varied from 50 metres to about a 150 metres.

Three nice full sized rabbits, all head shot or upper neck shot. Perfect for the pot, or so I thought. Blitzen thought differently.




Arriving home I left the rabbits hanging in the backyard and commanded Blitzen to "guard" them while I went in for a drink, get a knife and chopping board and then out to get them for dressing. However Blitzen had other ideas, and by the time I got out, all three were buried somewhere in the backyard ... found two of them the next day. He had buried and hid them well. So they were "dressed" for Blitzen's table instead ....

No matter as there are plenty more in the paddocks and vineyards.

I'll be going out to shoot as many as possible in the next few weeks. Perhaps needing to resort to some more drastic measures, such as warren gassing. I prefer to hunt and shoot them instead of course. As I shoot more and more of them, they will become more nocturnal so I will need to get out a hand held spotlight.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
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Ash
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #251496 - 03/08/14 02:09 PM

Thanks for the write up John! Keep this thread updated? Love seeing pics. Mix up the rifles a bit perhaps?

Cheers, sir!

--------------------
.


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KingBaboon
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Ash]
      #251521 - 04/08/14 04:16 AM

Seeing your bunnies brings back memories of my grandmother's fabulous rabbit stew (best in the world and forever unsurpassed, of course). And, as every time I remember it, my mouth goes watering...

Well done !

Why not tracking them down with a shotgun and the help of your beautiful pointing dog ? That's fun hunting !

--------------------

KBab



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KingBaboon
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: KingBaboon]
      #251529 - 04/08/14 07:29 AM

By the way, which species are they ? Looks like european rabbit, Oryctolagus cuniculus .

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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: KingBaboon]
      #251546 - 05/08/14 01:35 AM

Yes the rabbits would be the same species as in Europe. They were introduced into Australia by the colonialists and proved more than successful with huge plagues of them. After the introduction of myxomatosis and later calici virus they are more controlled. I will have lots of them until it warms up with some humidity when the mosquitoes and calici virus will take a toll of them.

I would love to see the recipe of your grandmothers rabbit stew.

I use a shotgun as well. But when hunting for the pot, I prefer a rifle with less meat damage and no pellets. On the crop the distance is too far for a shotgun. But in the grassy areas a shotgun is perfect. Only one rabbit was shot in the vineyard neighbouring the crop. Shot under the vines several rows in, with only its head poking out around a post.

Have been out on them a couple more times since.


Ash,

I think my .22 Magnum needs re-sighting in. Then it too will get a good workout.

BTW one of the rabbits I shot in the head at about a hundred metres. It flung itself into the air at least a metre. I thought it might be nose shot. When I walked up to it, its head was 75% destroyed. Shows what their nerve reactions and muscle memory can do. Using a .22 RF I know I loose a fair number down burrows just like that. A forked stick put down the hole and twisted will get some of them back out.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
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Ripp
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #251548 - 05/08/14 02:28 AM

Quote:



Ash,

I think my .22 Magnum needs re-sighting in. Then it too will get a good workout.

BTW one of the rabbits I shot in the head at about a hundred metres. It flung itself into the air at least a metre. I thought it might be nose shot. When I walked up to it, its head was 75% destroyed. Shows what their nerve reactions and muscle memory can do. Using a .22 RF I know I loose a fair number down burrows just like that. A forked stick put down the hole and twisted will get some of them back out.




The .22 Mag is a great little gun..use it a LOT here in Montana..all the way up to coyotes if they are close---100yds or less..kills them..

As to getting the rabbits out of the hole, have you tried twisting a length of barbed wire down the hole??.. we used to pull out wounded fox that way back home...

Ripp

--------------------
ALL MEN DIE, BUT FEW MEN TRULY LIVE..


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KingBaboon
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #251564 - 05/08/14 07:10 AM

Quote:

I would love to see the recipe of your grandmothers rabbit stew.




OK, here goes le civet de lapin de ma grand-mère :

Ingredients :

- 1 wild rabbit, skinned and gutted (save the liver and, if you can, the blood ; otherwise, pig blood works fine - if no blood available, use dark chocolate - see below)
- 2 medium-sized carrots
- 1 big onion
- 4-6 cloves of garlic
- 100 g bacon in small bits (lardons)
- butter
- 1 bottle of red wine
- 10 cl vinegar
- 10 cl olive oil
- thyme
- laurel
- parsley
- 3 cloves
- salt, pepper, Cayenne hot pepper, nutmeg
- 2 spoons of flour
- brandy, whisky, or any other firewater according to taste.

Chop the rodent into big pieces (hind and forelegs, back, ribcage) and dip it, except the liver, into a marinade composed of the following : wine + vinegar + olive oil + peeled and sliced carrots + sliced onion + garlic + clove + thyme + laurel + parsley + pepper + nutmeg + Cayenne pepper. No salt. Let it soak in the fridge for 2 days.

Take the meat out of the marinade, filter the marinade to separate the liquids from the vegetables.
In a pot, melt the butter and fry the bacon. Once the bacon is fried, take it out and put it aside. fry the meat on all sides, and take it out too. Then fry the vegetables from the marinade. Once the vegetables have been browned, put back the meat and bacon. Pour the flour. Do not stop moving it with a wooden spoon otherwise it will stick and burn. Pour the booze and flame it. Then it's time to add the liquids from the marinade and let it cook gently for a couple of hours. Add salt and rectify the seasoning if needed. 10 minutes before serving, add the liver, and off the fire and at the last moment because it mustn't cook, the blood ; if no blood available, 2 squares of dark chocolate melted in the sauce will give an interesting flavor and unctuosity. Serve with boiled potatoes or fresh pasta.

--------------------

KBab



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DarylS
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #251592 - 06/08/14 12:59 AM

Quote:



BTW one of the rabbits I shot in the head at about a hundred metres. It flung itself into the air at least a metre. I thought it might be nose shot. When I walked up to it, its head was 75% destroyed. Shows what their nerve reactions and muscle memory can do.




John - I used to shoot the European Hares back in South Western Ontario, Canada as a kid. The jumping into the air, as many as 3 times was common for head shots there too. HUGE bunny's that were usually fed to my Belgium Sheepdog, King.
Later, after trying them myself, back-straps and hind legs, they went into stew pot.

--------------------
Daryl


"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V


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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: KingBaboon]
      #251655 - 07/08/14 01:41 AM

KBab

I will give your grandmother's recipe a try.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
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"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: DarylS]
      #251656 - 07/08/14 01:44 AM

Daryl

Normally the dog gets the big ones. I usually like the three-quarters grown ones. But this time was going to use the adult ones.

The next day only shot one small rabbit, maybe one-third size. The dog got that one too.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
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"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #277350 - 30/01/16 04:45 PM

I'll have to post a photo of the same spots in Summer after the Rabbit hordes have been there for months. Will see about some photos for this this week. Pity I used the front end loader yesterday to destroy all the entrances to their warrens moving several tonnes of earth and sand but no doubt they have reopened them since.

They have eaten all the leaves off low hanging vine rods for maybe 100 metres down the rows, of course cropped the grass, they are useful for that, plus flattened all the grass in the hay paddock next door. But the coarser grasses on the creek banks are still knee high? Guess they are not preferred grasses, though my cattle when I had them loved it.

--------------------
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Rockdoc
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #277352 - 30/01/16 05:50 PM

I love shooting rabbits. Miss them as many places here the calici and myxo have been too effective.

But a friend has a problem with them, and goats and a few pigs. Time to give the double a work out. It is 5hrs drive however.

Thanks for the photos. We had a GSP that would take bones, meat and catch the occasional possum and bury them. Then dig them up and cover the deck in dirt!

Your vineyard looks lovely. And the whole area is beautiful.


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DarylS
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Rockdoc]
      #277364 - 31/01/16 06:20 AM

Sweet and Sour bunny stew is a good use for bunnies. Long cooking and slowly, then the pineapple, vinegar, sugar to taste - cooked over low heat in a large cauldron - YUMMY!
Bubble, bubble, Toil and Trouble.
"Ah - What trouble?" (Robert Redford to Will Grear in Jeramiah, Johnson, high up on the mountain side by the fire - scrawny snowshoe hare/rabbit (domestic?) on the spit over the open fire)

--------------------
Daryl


"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V


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Yochanan
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #277370 - 31/01/16 09:40 AM

John,
lamping rabbits, foxes etc. is not possible at nights? Its great fun. I think a 17 hmr would be perfect for rabbits at longer ranges than 22lr.

Maybe you shall renamed your place to "the bunny ranch"

Hasenpfeffer is very good dish to make on rabbit.

--------------------
© "I have never been able to appreciate 'shock' as applied to killing big game. It seems to me that you cannot kill an elephant weighing six tons by ´shock´unless you advocate the use of a field gun." - W.D.M. Bell: Wanderings of an Elephant Hunter.


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DarylS
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Yochanan]
      #277400 - 01/02/16 06:32 AM

We use our HMR's with mil dot scopes for shooting our Columbia ground Squirrels out to 200yards. The first year using them, we went all the way to 240yards, but had to many crawl-offs. Every year though, if and when I'm using my Martini .17 HMR, I manage a rat at 281/2/3yard mound of holes - 4th mil dot on my scope. At that range, the Marlin HMR will put the bullets all around that rat with him looking at each bullet splash, but the Martini is one shot, one rat.

At 200yards, you can consistently get head and high chest hits. The chest is about 1 1/4" wide, 1 3/4" if looking sideways. Wait, wait, wait, POW/SPUK!

--------------------
Daryl


"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V


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sbs470
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: DarylS]
      #277617 - 06/02/16 09:58 AM

I walked out this morning and counted 2 dozen all within easy range.I must get of my arse and clean then out, there are just to many at the moment.there must be at least 6 black ones running about.I might downsize to a .22 short as they are so close.Damn things barely get out of my way either on the tractor or quad bike
I might get the Powell out and roll a few over with some Grand Prix paper cartridges.any way you look at it those rabbits are going.


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DarylS
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: sbs470]
      #277620 - 06/02/16 10:26 AM

That would be fun with a semi-22LR handgun, like - Ruger, Browning, Colt or Harrington&Richardson match pistols!

--------------------
Daryl


"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V


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sbs470
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: DarylS]
      #277624 - 06/02/16 11:55 AM

Daryl
I couldn't hit the ground with a pistol unless I threw it.Thats why I load my Lancaster pistol with 410 shot shells to give me half a chance.


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DarylS
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: sbs470]
      #277626 - 06/02/16 01:05 PM

LOL

--------------------
Daryl


"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V


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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Rockdoc]
      #277659 - 07/02/16 08:33 PM

Quote:

I love shooting rabbits. Miss them as many places here the calici and myxo have been too effective.

But a friend has a problem with them, and goats and a few pigs. Time to give the double a work out. It is 5hrs drive however.

Thanks for the photos. We had a GSP that would take bones, meat and catch the occasional possum and bury them. Then dig them up and cover the deck in dirt!

Your vineyard looks lovely. And the whole area is beautiful.




If you are ever in this area, give me a call (before hand preferably) and drop by.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: DarylS]
      #277660 - 07/02/16 08:39 PM

Quote:

Sweet and Sour bunny stew is a good use for bunnies. Long cooking and slowly, then the pineapple, vinegar, sugar to taste - cooked over low heat in a large cauldron - YUMMY!
Bubble, bubble, Toil and Trouble.
"Ah - What trouble?" (Robert Redford to Will Grear in Jeramiah, Johnson, high up on the mountain side by the fire - scrawny snowshoe hare/rabbit (domestic?) on the spit over the open fire)




Never thought of sweet and sour rabbit. Something to try too. Rabbit not being a lot different to chicken in some respects such as texture, but different flavour, sweet and sour should work fine. Good idea.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Yochanan]
      #277661 - 07/02/16 08:47 PM

Quote:

John,
lamping rabbits, foxes etc. is not possible at nights? Its great fun. I think a 17 hmr would be perfect for rabbits at longer ranges than 22lr.

Maybe you shall renamed your place to "the bunny ranch"

Hasenpfeffer is very good dish to make on rabbit.




Johan,

Most Aussies do most of their "hunting" of rabbits and foxes and sometimes "everything else" with a spotlight.

Very possible for me to spotlight rabbits if I wanted. I could probably shoot a few dozen on my place by spotlight if I wanted and could be bothered. If I wanted to seriously shoot them down in numbers this is the way. Vine rows do make it harder, need to use a centrefire as the range can be further out and easy for a bunny t swap rows.

I just prefer to hunt by day and on foot.

I have a .22 Mag and numerous .222's and a .223 combination so don't need a .17 HMR. Telling myself that anyway. Lots of new ammo to try in the .22 Mag first.

Quote:

Hasenpfeffer is very good dish to make on rabbit.




Can you point me to a recipe for this? A peppery rabbit dish from the sounds of it.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #277662 - 07/02/16 08:52 PM

Five more bunnies in the freezer. Fleas are starting to get active. Dog brought me the first one with myxo or calici I have seen so far this year.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

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"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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Birdhunter50
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #277667 - 08/02/16 01:03 AM

When I was a boy, a friend and I would walk the rail road tracks out of town shooting rabbits. We would shoot as many as we could carry and then head back. He was a couple years older than I was and when he got old enough to drive, he bought and old pickup truck. We would take turns driving and the other guy would walk slightly ahead of the truck and off to one side and head shoot the rabbits with a .22 long rifle shell. We did this at dusk and only hunted them after the first snow or real cold snap, as that would kill off the sick ones.

We did this out in the country along the many dirt roads we had around here back then. Usually we would wait till the snow plows had pushed though the roads and pushed up large snow banks on either side of the road. It was best to pick an East/West road, if possible, because our prevailing winds usually comes out of the North in the winter. The Rabbits would burrow down into the snow banks on the North side to get out of the wind and we could shoot them there at very close range. Head shots only!

We did this at dusk and only hunted them after the first snow or real cold snap as that would kill off the sick ones. His Dad was laid off one winter and they didn't have much to live on. He and I filled their freezer with Rabbits, Quail, Pheasants, Squirrels, and Deer, they didn't eat too bad that winter! We would shoot rabbits till dark or till we got as many as we wanted to clean that night. His Mom would have a good hot supper ready for us, and after supper we would clean rabbits till almost bedtime. If I had any homework to do that night it meant a real late bedtime for me.

One of the things I loved to make was rabbit sausage, we would bone out several rabbits and cut up a bunch of pork fat into cubes, then run the whole thing though a grinder. We would buy packets of sausage seasoning at a locale store and would mix in about three teaspoons of that for each pound of ground meat. It was wonderful stuff to eat on a cold morning along with your eggs and homemade toast!
Bob


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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Birdhunter50]
      #277738 - 09/02/16 11:09 PM

Rabbit sausage is a new idea.

Very different where you are to here, here usually bunny hunting is done in hot and dusty places.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
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"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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DarylS
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #277749 - 10/02/16 03:41 AM

That does sound good. I know (Canada) goose pepperoni is good, maybe bunny pepperoni is as well.

--------------------
Daryl


"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V


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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: DarylS]
      #311946 - 08/02/18 03:18 PM

Re-opened this thread to extract a photo.

At the moment I have way too many rabbits around. I saw six big ones run in a well spaced line from under a tree at dawn this morning. Two or three others sitting elsewhere. This is from my backyard alone ...

Time for the rifle and shotgun to come out.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"


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Homer
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #312187 - 11/02/18 09:52 AM

G'Day Fella's,

Looking forward to a Hunt Report (with photo's),from you NitroX.

Avagreatweekendeh!
Homer

--------------------
"Beware the Lolly Pop of Mediocrity,
Lick it Once and You Will Suck Forever"


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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Homer]
      #312201 - 11/02/18 12:31 PM

Ha ha. Here is a guesstimate of the hunt report.

"Got up out of bed ... hopefully put some clothes on ... took the dog into the backyard for him to relieve himself ... brought along the Mauser .22 with the wonderful new old scope Kuduae sold to me! Shot hopefully two or three rabbits in the dawn crispness/dew/ffffing residual heat still left over from the previous day (Depending on the dawn weather?). Skinned and gutted them. Hung them to cool (not likely in February)/put them in the fridge to chill .... Went back to bed.

Ha ha. Prelim hunt report

Will have to make it much more magnificent!

And unlike a good John Taylor hunt, wear clothes for the photos! He He.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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Iowa_303s
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #312210 - 11/02/18 01:02 PM

Be careful when stalking those wee beasties, one never known where the Rabbit of Caerbannog may pop up next.

--------------------
Matt

formerly known as Iowa_303

"Once your reputation is ruined you can live your life quite freely."

"Enkelkinder über alles"


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Ripp
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #312241 - 12/02/18 11:14 AM

That is some pretty looking country... looks peaceful..

Ripp

--------------------
ALL MEN DIE, BUT FEW MEN TRULY LIVE..


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Wayne59
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Ripp]
      #312243 - 12/02/18 11:30 AM

Wish there were still some rabbits here in Ga. Would be great fun with my Rook rifles.

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NitroXAdministrator
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Birdhunter50]
      #318054 - 14/07/18 05:24 PM

Quote:

When I was a boy, a friend and I would walk the rail road tracks out of town shooting rabbits. We would shoot as many as we could carry and then head back. He was a couple years older than I was and when he got old enough to drive, he bought and old pickup truck. We would take turns driving and the other guy would walk slightly ahead of the truck and off to one side and head shoot the rabbits with a .22 long rifle shell. We did this at dusk and only hunted them after the first snow or real cold snap, as that would kill off the sick ones.

We did this out in the country along the many dirt roads we had around here back then. Usually we would wait till the snow plows had pushed though the roads and pushed up large snow banks on either side of the road. It was best to pick an East/West road, if possible, because our prevailing winds usually comes out of the North in the winter. The Rabbits would burrow down into the snow banks on the North side to get out of the wind and we could shoot them there at very close range. Head shots only!

We did this at dusk and only hunted them after the first snow or real cold snap as that would kill off the sick ones. His Dad was laid off one winter and they didn't have much to live on. He and I filled their freezer with Rabbits, Quail, Pheasants, Squirrels, and Deer, they didn't eat too bad that winter! We would shoot rabbits till dark or till we got as many as we wanted to clean that night. His Mom would have a good hot supper ready for us, and after supper we would clean rabbits till almost bedtime. If I had any homework to do that night it meant a real late bedtime for me.

One of the things I loved to make was rabbit sausage, we would bone out several rabbits and cut up a bunch of pork fat into cubes, then run the whole thing though a grinder. We would buy packets of sausage seasoning at a locale store and would mix in about three teaspoons of that for each pound of ground meat. It was wonderful stuff to eat on a cold morning along with your eggs and homemade toast!
Bob




I wish I had photos from when I was just out of school and I and my friends could drive. We used to go spotlighting for rabbits on a sheep station near the Murray River, at Blanchetown. Near here. My friend's dad had an old ute near the river, unregistered, which we used to use for the spotlighting. I think we used to get arounf 75 to a 100 in a few hours, but weren't too serious about it. Not a lot by true commercial standards, but a LOT when you have gut them all. My friend used to sell them to a restaurant at the back door ... for maybe a dollar or a dollar fifty each.

I remember when we were shooting, we saw a building's lights in front of us, Oops, the local cop shop! Which was near a road bordering the property. We moved elsewhere. When driving across the only public road earlier in the day, from gate to gate, a truck went past and behind it in the dust was a police car. It drove on though.

Later after a few hours shooting, we returned across the road, and maybe a hundred metres in. Were busy gutting the rabbits, throwing the guts in every direction. And the local police decided to pay a visit. Had to walk gingerly through the minefield of rabbit guts to get to the vehicle. Of course asked whether we had permission to shoot on the station, we did. They used to catch about 50 or more groups poaching on the station a year. Then of course had to check all the firearms for registration. All were registered. Then gave Andrew, the guy with the access "curry" for driving an unregistered ute across the road ... left with giving him a warning. %%%%######****((( always have to act that way ...

A photo showing 75 rabbits hanging on the ute would be nice to show to our NE friends on here, particularly when rabbits can be rarer than deer in some parts of Europe and elsewhere.

I am planning to make some winter rabbit comfort food this month soon.

Will have to do "another report" on a rabbit hunt. With the mornings recently having been from minus 4 deg C to zero, no nude backyard rabbit shoots though !!! ie seeing my last "rabbut hunt report". I have enough bunnies probably in the freezers, but why not get some fresh meat. Again lots of them around.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318055 - 14/07/18 05:45 PM

Some people mentioned the vineyard and property photos. Here are some links and photos from another thread and webpage.





http://nitroexpress.com/files/200302/forums/carrara1.html

--------------------
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318056 - 14/07/18 05:47 PM

Some Autumn Photos


"Highways of the gods"












http://forums.nitroexpress.com/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=1391&page=0&fpart=1&vc=1

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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318057 - 14/07/18 05:48 PM

Some Winter Pics

"A Pot of Gold" - actually two rainbows ending less than fifty metres away






Chilly




At last it is green and the creek is arising






Ah, where are those ducks?



--------------------
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318058 - 14/07/18 05:49 PM

Some pics for you flower lovers ...

"Salvation Jane" also known as "Patterson's Curse" growing in the mid-rows of a vineyard.



Known as "Salvation Jane" as it is a stock feed weed which sheep and cattle will eat and it will grow with minimum moisture and is often the only feed available in a drought.

Otherwise known as "Patterson's Curse" as it is a weed and there is better stock fodder and it can infest paddocks and compete with better grasses.

It also when mature irritates bare skin if brushed against, but not badly.



Mowing it down as a flatter surface in the vineyard increases air flow and reduces frost risk on cold Spring nights.

Also mowing down in preparation for spraying with a herbicide to conserve moisture for the vines.

http://forums.nitroexpress.com/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=1391&page=0&fpart=2&vc=1

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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318059 - 14/07/18 05:50 PM

PS Makes it easier to see the rabbits and hares to shoot in the wine rows as well.

A couple nice juicy medium sized rabbits shot for the pot while slashing the "Jane" weeds too.



Another photo:



--------------------
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318061 - 14/07/18 05:51 PM

Because shooters are such flower "lovers" I thought I'd post these.

One day I was in my house and noticed cars kept stopping on the road in front of the property, over a dozen or more in two hours. So I decided to check out what all these people were up to and found our row of cacti on the front fence were flowering. Supposedly it only happens a day or two each year. The ladies network must have been phoning around to have that many people stop.









These photos remind me of images from the movie "The Day of the Triffids".

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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318063 - 14/07/18 05:51 PM

Some Spring photos from last year - September 2010.




GSP Blitzen on an inspection tour. Roos, foxes, hares and rabbits might be found lurking ...




Spring buds starting to burst from the spurs.






--------------------
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318064 - 14/07/18 05:51 PM

Some old vines, up to 90 years old.












--------------------
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318065 - 14/07/18 05:53 PM

Some nice little violet flowers that grows in the grasses.







A 40 to 50 year old vine, chip budded from Shiraz to Semillon in the early 1980's





Skippy in a nearby hay crop.








We have a wide variety of wildlife on the property, some nomadic. Wild ducks in the creek when flowing, mountain ducks, wood ducks, black duck, grey teal. Native game such as the Eastern Grey Kangaroo, once an Emu, echidnas, brown and red bellied black snakes. Very poisonous! Small lizards, stumpy tailed, blue tongue, and various others. Introduced game such as foxes, hares and rabbits. Pigeons! Native Crested Pigeons, we call Top Knots. Native birds such as galahs, I shoot these over the crops. Rosellas, small green parrots, willy wag tails, kookaburras, sulphur crested cockatoos. Hawks and the occasional wedge tail eagle. Froggy mouth owls, and other owl species.

I hope to bring photo and video footage of many of these species over time. Got to carry a camera around more!

--------------------
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318066 - 14/07/18 05:54 PM

Female Black Duck and ducklings














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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318067 - 14/07/18 05:56 PM

Another photo from another thread. Winter now, with dormant vines.

***

Here is something else I saw amongst the vines a day or two ago.



http://forums.nitroexpress.com/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=1391&page=0&fpart=3&vc=1

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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318068 - 14/07/18 06:42 PM

Very interesting photos, certainly looks like a nice place.

Waidmannsheil.

--------------------
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: Waidmannsheil]
      #318069 - 14/07/18 07:18 PM

Looking to repair the links on some very old pages, recovered some images.

My old GSP Siegfried,

A young Siegfried inspecting a then young shiraz vineyard.



This spot needed extensive excavation ... he was a big digger.



Watching my master.



A house is not a home without a dog. And a neither is a winery or vineyard.

--------------------
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"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318070 - 14/07/18 07:23 PM



That's about 1,250 bottles of Shiraz wine and future fun



Hand picking some odd shiraz vines out of a then grafted vineyard from shiraz to semillon. Since re-grafted all back to shiraz ...

--------------------
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #318072 - 14/07/18 07:37 PM

Cabernet Sauvignon on the vine



View across the vineyard towards the North Para River



A splash of Autumn Red



"Sunshine in a bottle". Cool shade among the vine leaves.



--------------------
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #341386 - 25/05/20 08:04 PM

Tagged: Carrara

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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #341395 - 26/05/20 03:37 AM

Thanks for the pictures, John. - Lovely. Next time I get to Australia, will visit for sure.

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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: KingBaboon]
      #363597 - 17/03/22 01:33 AM

Quote:

Quote:

I would love to see the recipe of your grandmothers rabbit stew.




OK, here goes le civet de lapin de ma grand-mère :

Ingredients :

- 1 wild rabbit, skinned and gutted (save the liver and, if you can, the blood ; otherwise, pig blood works fine - if no blood available, use dark chocolate - see below)
- 2 medium-sized carrots
- 1 big onion
- 4-6 cloves of garlic
- 100 g bacon in small bits (lardons)
- butter
- 1 bottle of red wine
- 10 cl vinegar
- 10 cl olive oil
- thyme
- laurel
- parsley
- 3 cloves
- salt, pepper, Cayenne hot pepper, nutmeg
- 2 spoons of flour
- brandy, whisky, or any other firewater according to taste.

Chop the rodent into big pieces (hind and forelegs, back, ribcage) and dip it, except the liver, into a marinade composed of the following : wine + vinegar + olive oil + peeled and sliced carrots + sliced onion + garlic + clove + thyme + laurel + parsley + pepper + nutmeg + Cayenne pepper. No salt. Let it soak in the fridge for 2 days.

Take the meat out of the marinade, filter the marinade to separate the liquids from the vegetables.
In a pot, melt the butter and fry the bacon. Once the bacon is fried, take it out and put it aside. fry the meat on all sides, and take it out too. Then fry the vegetables from the marinade. Once the vegetables have been browned, put back the meat and bacon. Pour the flour. Do not stop moving it with a wooden spoon otherwise it will stick and burn. Pour the booze and flame it. Then it's time to add the liquids from the marinade and let it cook gently for a couple of hours. Add salt and rectify the seasoning if needed. 10 minutes before serving, add the liver, and off the fire and at the last moment because it mustn't cook, the blood ; if no blood available, 2 squares of dark chocolate melted in the sauce will give an interesting flavor and unctuosity. Serve with boiled potatoes or fresh pasta.




A recipe to try.

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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #363599 - 17/03/22 04:21 AM

Rather picky and extravagant to me, for one rabbit. Now, if it was a cauldron of bunnies for a wild game banquet, then OK. Would need several btls. of wine/brandy/whiskey I guess - at least one each for the cook. LOL
Makes my mouth water just reading it, John.

--------------------
Daryl


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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: DarylS]
      #363622 - 17/03/22 05:37 PM

I have some French cook books which say for a recipe has 7 pages. The beginners guide has 3/4s a page. All those extra steps has real effect on flavour.

Eg simple recipes say throw everything in the pot together. Easier for the "busy woman" ... blah! Instead first soften onions in oil to maybe slightly brown. Remove. Soften potatoes to brown a bit. Allows quicker cooking times as well. Remove. Brown the meat. 8f doing a real curry, some spices etc a heated first. Then other meats and vegetables added.

Simple extra steps make a significant flavour difference.

"For the busy modern woman " just throw all the crap together, or heat up the frozen supermarket packet in the microwave ...

--------------------
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"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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Re: A bit of crop protection [Re: NitroX]
      #363623 - 17/03/22 05:38 PM

I want to make the grand mother's rabbit recipe. Certainly several three quarter sized bunnies.

--------------------
John aka NitroX

...
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"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
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Edited by NitroX (25/10/22 10:13 PM)


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