Can we knock it off with the airgun crap?
#11

The OP is jerking yawl's chain !
I don't post much on air rifles, but have one.
Its always was just a tool for:
1) teaching my son to shoot when he was young
and
2) ridding the place of harmful varmints.
I never hunted with it - I kill with it.
Just started teaching my grand daughter how to shoot with it - She loves it.
So its covered 3 generations now.
I don't post much on air rifles, but have one.
Its always was just a tool for:
1) teaching my son to shoot when he was young
and
2) ridding the place of harmful varmints.
I never hunted with it - I kill with it.
Just started teaching my grand daughter how to shoot with it - She loves it.
So its covered 3 generations now.
#15
Spike
Join Date: Dec 2020
Posts: 2

#16

There are posts in this sub all the time that feature "airgun hunting" in various forms or fashions. My issue with the majority of them is THAT THEY ARE NOT HUNTING RELATED. Someone sitting around a farm shooting finches for fun or popping off at ducks with a ****** air rifle is not hunting, and every youtube video I see of this garbage is the very essence of a ****post. Go farm karma someplace else with that childish bull****.
The second topic or issue raised by the OP relates to whether airgun hunting is actually hunting if the target or quarry is "shooting finches for fun or popping off at ducks for fun..." The OP's post includes his disdain for many YouTube video clips that he apparently forced himself to watch and be disgusted with. Trashing a method of hunting does run the risk of giving anti-hunters "ammunition" so to speak for opposing hunting with that method(s). It's okay to prefer one method of hunting over another. But that doesn't necessarily mean that method is better, easier or even more sportsmanlike. I hunt primarily with a rifle but have to get much closer to turkeys than deer when I hunt turkeys with a shotgun during turkey season. The same could be said for hunting with airguns, bows, crossbows, BP, pistols, spears, knives, etc. Each of those requires getting much closer to the game to get a shot or attempt at taking the game. Each method is different and can require some additional hunting skills but each method is still hunting.
The OP "sort of" brought up a 3rd topic of farm hunting but I don't believe he was referring to High Fence hunting. He seemed to refer to hunting or shooting nuisance birds at farms. One could argue that shooting coyotes with night vision and silencers at night on cow farms is similar but I've watched and enjoyed those YouTube videos also. These may not be strict versions of hunting as in some kind of spot and stalk hunting but they still have their place and need. I like to hunt as much as the next person but frankly, I gotta admit that I would jump at the chance to shoot some coyotes at night on a cattle ranch with night vision and a silencer if it were legal in CA (score one for Texas). I also have many happy childhood memories of hunting with airguns and have bought 2 PCPs due to IdahoRon's bad influence with all of his cool topics and posts about airgun hunting. I'm planning on buying more airguns so Ron has really got me hooked on this stuff. I'm not sure if I'll ever take a bear with an airgun but I might try sometime.

Last edited by JW; 12-24-2020 at 09:25 AM.
#17

Many people trap, some poison rodents or varmints. I prefer live traps and air rifle (or pistol). I've live trapped, Rats, Mice, Raccoons, Cats. Dogs. Blackbirds and Squirrels. I've killed a boatload of Rats and am currently working on Nutrias. Live traps and air rifles are neat, you can let loose whatever you don't want to trap and you can pick your shots. After many years of trapping and air gun hunting, I've accidentally killed one unintended bird, a Titmouse, that got smashed by the falling door in a live trap.
I detest poison, it is indiscriminant.
I kind of understand the posters revulsion about indiscriminately shooting animals. I also understand the love of hunting, it is IMO genetic. Some people have more hunting drive than others. It is up to us to teach responsible outlets for the hunting drive that is strong in some people.
I detest poison, it is indiscriminant.
I kind of understand the posters revulsion about indiscriminately shooting animals. I also understand the love of hunting, it is IMO genetic. Some people have more hunting drive than others. It is up to us to teach responsible outlets for the hunting drive that is strong in some people.
#18
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 1,175

The OP's post (quoted above) I also have many happy childhood memories of hunting with airguns and have bought 2 PCPs due to IdahoRon's bad influence with all of his cool topics and posts about airgun hunting. I'm planning on buying more airguns so Ron has really got me hooked on this stuff.



#19

On this forum I'm brand new. 🙋🏻♂️
And I have really enjoyed reading some threads like this one (and others) —
where members calmly but directly and with reason guide a misguided poster back on target, so to speak.
Well done.
That's the kind of forum I appreciate. 😊
Matthias
And I have really enjoyed reading some threads like this one (and others) —
where members calmly but directly and with reason guide a misguided poster back on target, so to speak.
Well done.
That's the kind of forum I appreciate. 😊
Matthias
#20

And to add to that:
Yes, I'm fascinated by airgunning. 😄
It is a great alternative to powder burners — if the law (country, state, township) makes PB use complicated. 👍🏼
Or if you'd rather not alarm your neighbors. 👍🏼
Airgunning is quite challenging because our quarry has very small kill zones.
And our projectiles get mercilessly blown off by the wind.
E.g.: Using a typical .22 airrifle with a typical pellet at just 30 yards,
on a typical day with a barely perceptible wind of 5mph —
that poor pellet gets blown by the wind by more than the size of the kill zone...! 😱
Same goes for estimating range to target. Because the AG trajectories are so steep in comparison to PB even a small error in ranging easily places the shot far below or above the tiny kill zone....! 🙄
➔ AND THAT'S WHAT MAKES AIRGUNNING SO MUCH FUN!
➔ The challenge of getting the ballistics just right. 👍🏼😊
Matthias
Yes, I'm fascinated by airgunning. 😄
It is a great alternative to powder burners — if the law (country, state, township) makes PB use complicated. 👍🏼
Or if you'd rather not alarm your neighbors. 👍🏼
Airgunning is quite challenging because our quarry has very small kill zones.
And our projectiles get mercilessly blown off by the wind.
E.g.: Using a typical .22 airrifle with a typical pellet at just 30 yards,
on a typical day with a barely perceptible wind of 5mph —
that poor pellet gets blown by the wind by more than the size of the kill zone...! 😱
Same goes for estimating range to target. Because the AG trajectories are so steep in comparison to PB even a small error in ranging easily places the shot far below or above the tiny kill zone....! 🙄
➔ AND THAT'S WHAT MAKES AIRGUNNING SO MUCH FUN!
➔ The challenge of getting the ballistics just right. 👍🏼😊
Matthias