![]() ![]() Trijicon Accupoint 1-4x24 - I can not decide between the triangle or the crosshair The triangle has BAC for quick/2 eye aiming, the crosshair does not. On a side note, no matter which scope, I will be fitting it with a LaRue mount. Any reason you would pick a certain scope below? I'm not sure that I will need/desire a BDC reticle, as this is an under 300 yard rifle. If you didn't notice, I am partial to Trijicon and am leaning that way. Most/all varmint hunting will be inside 75 yards, with the exception being the yotes. I would like the ability to chase down coyotes and rabbits with it, as well as shoot squirrels out of the trees in the pecan farm. One thing it will dub as is my ranch rifle. I would like it to be decent in all areas, but not expecting it to be substantial in any particular area. This rifle is going to be my general 'all around' rifle with no specific use. I was going to go with an ACOG, but for various reasons, I have decided to go with a 1-4x scope. Poncho grabbed it and tried to keep it for himself, but Trujillo gently reminded him to retrieve it with a touch of the E-collar remote control.So, I bought a 14.5" LMT M4ergy and will keep it looking pretty much like a standard issue M4. When it did not fall immediately, Trujillo shot it again with the shotgun to make sure it did not enter a hollow. I aligned the crosshairs and hit the squirrel with a hollow-point bullet. Trujillo still could not spot it, but I did. The squirrel scampered from its hiding place, climbing to a higher vantage point. 22-caliber target rifle with a 3x9-power Burris scope. 6 shot while I was carrying my Remington 541-T, an extremely accurate. He was carrying a 20-gauge over-under shotgun loaded with No. We could not see the squirrel, so he shook a sapling near the oak where the squirrel was hiding. Trujillo headed into the cover while I stayed on the open ridge overlooking the swampy area. In moments, he was barking in the thick brush bordering a small creek. Trujillo fitted an electronic training collar to Poncho. But even during deer season, if I hunt in the middle of the day, few other hunters are in the woods because most of them hunt a couple of hours after sunrise and before sunset." "That way, I am not interfering with someone else's hunt. "I really like hunting the public lands after deer season ends," he said. It opens in mid-October and goes out the last day of February. Most of the year, squirrel season is closed. Trujillo said he had walked off 30 pounds by taking Poncho out on training walks. But I would rather have a dedicated squirrel dog." A cur is an all-around dog and you can do use them for different game. I am still working on breaking him from chasing deer and rabbits. Poncho is now 2 years old and has treed more than 30 squirrels that Trujillo has taken home. Trujillo said he took Poncho to the woods near his home in Castle Hayne nearly every day, all year long. It was so much fun that, once I had the time, I decided to get a squirrel dog." We hunted afternoons after school and on weekends. "I lived in the North Carolina mountains when I was a kid and had a friend who had a squirrel dog. "I bought Poncho from a breeder in South Carolina," Trujillo said. Whining in his kennel during most of the trip was Poncho, a Parnell's Carolina cur. Bruce Trujillo, who operates Tight Loop Charters (91) during the warmer months when people are more interested in coming to the beach to fish for Spanish and king mackerel, amberjack and other species of offshore game fish from his catamaran. The property is in the North Carolina Wildlife Commission's Game Lands program under a cooperative agreement. Nevertheless, we had driven from Wilmington to Bladen Lakes State Forest. It was early afternoon on a day in late December, with an occasional glimmer of sunlight trying unsuccessfully to chase away the dreariness of an overcast day.
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