CowboyCS
.333 member
Reged: 05/10/07
Posts: 386
Loc: Kansas u.S.A.
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This hunt actually started 2 years ago...I was contacted by a potential customer who was interested in having me build a custom rifle for him. He had a very nice 2006 Searcy 450-400 3" Double Rifle that he was interested in trading for the custom build. When he first contacted me 2 years ago I wasn't in a position to make the trade and commit to the build, a few months ago though I contacted him and asked if he still had the rifle and if he was still interested in making the trade after working out the bulk of the details, he shipped the rifle, loaded ammo and all the reloading components and accessories to me. They arrived a few weeks back and I went out to my range and did some shooting to just run the rifle through it's paces and check the loads for regulation. Everything was tip top and the regulation was very good with the loads he had worked up. I set it aside and waited patiently for opening day of Kansas Firearms Whitetail Season.
Opening day was Wednesday, I was able to hunt a few hours in the afternoon/evening but I only saw 3 does and they were on my neighbors property( I own 160 acres of mostly farm ground with a few small pastures and one decent stand of trees). I hunted the same afternoon/evening hours Thursday and didn't see anything, Friday(yesterday) I had to go out of town and follow my wife around while she spent all my money on Christmas presents, so no hunting at all. So I was really looking forward to getting out this morning and spending the whole day out in my trees but what did I wake up to a FOGGY, MISERABLE, MISTY MORNING with visibility of about 10 yards. I could almost cut the stuff with a knife it was so thick. SO instead of rushing around and trying to get out early like I had planned I took my time and drank some coffee, did the farm chores, then loaded all my gear in the truck and drove out to the north pasture and parked. I still couldn't see more than about 30 yards so I sat for a minute debating if it was worth heading for my tree stand. I really wasn't interested in sitting in the damp with really no good visibility and just hoping to get a shot at a deer. Finally I decided it's either hunt and try to enjoy a day off from the shop that didn't involve shopping with my wife or go back to the house and get to work..so I opted for the tree stand. I grabbed the 450-400 and the new book I had bought yesterday and my water jug and headed across the pasture to the trees. The trees run down through a low spot in the pasture and divide it into two sections the large open area and then a small piece of pasture that is ringed with trees about 2/3 of the way around and then opens out onto my neighbor's field. My legs were wet about 8 inches up the cuffs when I reached the trail the deer have walked through the trees. I walked up the trail a little ways from my tree stand and hung a cotton ball with some Doe Urine on it, then back tracked to my tree stand and climbed up, then I pulled the rifle up being careful not to left it swing into anything on the way up. Once I got all settled in, I had a good look around and found that the visibility had improved out to about 50 yards and had a nice clear line of site to the trail but not much beyond were I had hung the cotton ball. It was about 8:30 when I started reading my book, stopping every so often to have a glance around, not that there was any real reason to, it was very still and calm this morning and I could here every little sound and nothing was really moving about. After about 45 minutes of reading the mist and fog had finally cleared to the point that I could see to the edge of the trees were it meets the edge of my wheat field. About 15 minutes later I looked up and saw this buck just coming out of the wheat field and entering the trees.
That's when the agony of patience began...there is about 150 yards of pretty heavy tree growth and down branches between the edge were he came in and were the lure was hanging. It felt like an eternity waiting for him to make his way through the trees to the opening in the trail. I'd see him stop every few steps raise his head up high and take a few strong sniffs then he would go back to picking through the grass then take another few steps and lift his head and take another couple good sniffs. I could tell by the way he was acting he was catching traces of the scent but with out and breeze to carry the smell to him he just wasn't in that big of a hurry to find it. It didn't really take an eternity it only actually took about 35 minutes or so for him to get close enough to get a big whiff of the scent. At which point he became much more interested in that and a lot less interested in breakfast.
Unfortunately for me he decided to get off the trail and come in from the side to investigate. If he had come straight down the trail he would have passed behind a patch of brush and I would have had a chance to shoulder my rifle when he couldn't see me. He got right up to the lure and was sniffing it and I decided I was out of option I was just going to have to shoulder up and hope for the best...the minute I moved he spotted me and took off though the trees headed for my back fence line. I swung on him and followed him through the trees and as soon as he got clear and I had a good shot I squeezed the right trigger and he went down almost instantly from the Hornady 210gr XTP. He dropped just yards from my property line. In my adrenaline fueled rush I opened the action and watched one of my brass go shooting out of the tree stand never to be seen again.
I took the other loaded round out and stuck it in my pocket lowered the rifle down, climbed down myself and then reloaded and went to verify that he wasn't getting up. It was a nice clean shot through the lung right behind the shoulder, so minimal meat loss(just a couple ribs to throw away). The 210 performed very well, it went through and through going it .410 and leaving about and 1" hole going out the other side.
I filled out my tag then went back to the truck and drove up to the house to get my Wife. Thankfully she is an avid hunter/fisher/shooter herself so she has no problem dealing with dead critter and helping me. She was nice enough to grab the camera and snap a few shots. I had it dressed, hung skinned and washed down before noon and have spent the rest of the day putting up Christmas decorations.

No he's not some monster trophy buck, but he'll taste good and he suites me just fine for first blood on my new to me Double Rifle. A bad day of hunting is better than a good day of work and a good day of hunting is hard to beat no matter what else you do.
As I sit here typing this up on my back porch I am enjoying a nice cup of Hot Cocoa spiked with a shot of Amarula and smoking a good cigar. So all in all what started out looking like a pretty miserable day has ended very nicely.
Cheers,
Colin
-------------------- The Bill of Rights- Void were prohibited by law
Stolzer & Son's Gunsmithing
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tinker
.416 member
Reged: 12/03/05
Posts: 4835
Loc: Nevada
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Good on you Colin
Happy Holidays!
Cheers Tinker
-------------------- --Self-Appointed Colonel, DRSS--
"It IS a dangerous game, and so named for a reason, and you can't play from the keyboard. " --Some Old Texan...
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Idahoshooter
.275 member
Reged: 27/10/12
Posts: 64
Loc: Idaho, USA
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Now that's how you break in a new rifle! What powder charge were you using with the XTP? 25 gr of Trail Boss with the speer 210 gr deep curl shoots 1600 fps and regulates perfectly in my 450/400.
Greg
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DaggaBoyBlog
.275 member
Reged: 28/02/12
Posts: 57
Loc: Sydney, Australia
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What a perfect way to get through a miserable misty morning...
A neat little buck; A wife that gets her hands dirty; A spiked hot cocoa; and A cigar.
Shame about those Christmas decorations...
-------------------- DaggaBoy Blog - Hunting adventures of an ordinary bloke... http://www.daggaboyblog.com.au/
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CowboyCS
.333 member
Reged: 05/10/07
Posts: 386
Loc: Kansas u.S.A.
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Thanks guys.
Idahoshooter,
The customer I traded the rifle for sent me all the load data for the loaded ammo he sent with it but I haven't had a chance yet to actually run anything across my chronograph to verify the velocities and the loads.
He sent me the 210 loads and some 300gr loads and then all the loading data for the 210's the 300's and the original regulation loads done by Butch Searcy for the 400gr Woodliegh.
Caliber: .450-400 NE 3” (400 Jeffery) Barrel length: 24 to 26” Powder: Accurate -- 5744. Bullet weight: 210 grains. Reduced load: 37.0 grains (1650 – 1750 ft/p/sec) Midrange load: 47.0 grains (2200 – 2300 ft/p/sec) Maximum load: 60.0 grains (2750 – 2850 Ft/p/sec) Bullet weight: 300 grains. Reduced load: 36.0 grains (1650 – 1750 ft/p/sec) Midrange load: 50.0 grains (2175 – 2275 ft/p/sec) Maximum load: 55.0 grains (2275 – 2375 Ft/p/sec).
Searcy Load: Case: Norma Primer: Federal 215 Powder IMR 4831, 82 grains Bullet Woodliegh 400gr (nominal 2050 fps)
Like I said though I haven't had a chance to reload anything for it yet and run it across my chrony to verify.
Colin
-------------------- The Bill of Rights- Void were prohibited by law
Stolzer & Son's Gunsmithing
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DarylS
.700 member
Reged: 10/08/05
Posts: 27711
Loc: Beautiful British Columbia, Ca...
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Way to go Colin - shooting at a running deer in the bush is a good feat. He'll taste all the better for it. His antlers are so white, too. Same colour as several year old drops- around here.
-------------------- Daryl
"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V
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HistoricBore
.300 member
Reged: 28/09/11
Posts: 232
Loc: United Kingdom
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Your Friday sounds very familiar....
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lancaster
.470 member
Reged: 06/05/08
Posts: 9532
Loc: There's a lighthouse in the mi...
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waidmannsheil to your brave deer can you make pics of the bullet?
I load 210 grains .410 bullets in my Winchester M 1910 and dont know what they are good for.
-------------------- Norwegian hunter misses moose, shoots man on toilet
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bringing civilisation to the barbarians
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458Win
.333 member
Reged: 15/12/06
Posts: 342
Loc: Alaska
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Nice job Colin and thanks for sharing. If you get up here some winter we can chase some of our Kodiak blacktails with our 450/400 doubles
Here is one I took a couple years ago with my Zoli O&U in 450/400. Even with full power loads it puts them down with little meat destruction.
-------------------- Anyone who claims the 30-06 is ineffective has either never used one - or else is unwittingly commenting on their marksmanship
Phil Shoemaker
www.grizzlyskinsofalaska.com
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twobobbwana
.333 member
Reged: 25/11/11
Posts: 299
Loc: Queensland, Australia
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"Think you used enough dynamite there Butch ????"
Good work Colin.
Just goes to show "they won't come to you". "You don't shoot them in your lounge room".
We make all kinds of excuses why it's too much trouble to go hunting and then, when you make the effort and have results like you did, you curse yourself for not doing it often enough.
Life gets in the way though.
Great result. Pleased you're happy with your Searcy.
Don't spend too much time out of your shop though as we like watching the progress of your projects.
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CowboyCS
.333 member
Reged: 05/10/07
Posts: 386
Loc: Kansas u.S.A.
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Thanks guys.
458win, I might take you up on that offer someday.
Twobobbwana, don't worry I hardly have time to get out of my shop. I'll probably take a few days off for Christmas and then I'll be taking my nephew out for late firearms season from the 1st to the 4th and then it's all work for quite a while.
Colin
-------------------- The Bill of Rights- Void were prohibited by law
Stolzer & Son's Gunsmithing
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twobobbwana
.333 member
Reged: 25/11/11
Posts: 299
Loc: Queensland, Australia
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Colin,
I understand the importance of getting away from the bench. You've got to "freshen the mind" occasionally by doing something else otherwise some of these projects become irksome.
Taking time away from work to do some living is what it's all about.
If it's just Work and Bills it becomes a dreary existence.
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416rigby
.300 member
Reged: 16/11/05
Posts: 141
Loc: Port Angeles, Washington USA
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Phil, that's a helluva nice buck! For the outdoors, the best 7 years of my life were spent on Kodiak.
Rick
-------------------- "Life's too short to hunt with an ugly gun"
U.S. Coast Guard, retired
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