|
11-28-2022, 07:38 PM | #3 | ||||||
|
the a-5 is one fine gun....our doves have all left....charlie
|
||||||
The Following User Says Thank You to charlie cleveland For Your Post: |
11-29-2022, 10:53 AM | #4 | |||||||
|
Quote:
I believe Val Browning was the one that came up with the auto-load feature for a shell put into the magazine. This feature I understand was one of the reasons production moved from Belgium to Japan as the many parts and complicated feature cost too much to make in Belgium, and eventually resulted in the demise of the expensive A5 compared to other autos. But one can't beat the quality of the original A5! A couple of times with a bird that just hit the ground, and one falling, I was pulling the trigger on an empty chamber. The winter doves are the greatest hunting of all here. To heck with sitting in a deer stand. |
|||||||
The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Jerry Harlow For Your Post: |
11-29-2022, 11:04 AM | #5 | ||||||
|
That feature enabled me to kill 4 Pheasants in less than a minute as they poured out the end of a long hedgerow ahead of my partners Brittanies in Glen Rock, PA years ago. The Auto 5 has been a very special gun for me over the years.
|
||||||
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Joe Dreisch For Your Post: |
11-29-2022, 05:05 PM | #6 | ||||||
|
my hats off too the a-5....charlie
|
||||||
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to charlie cleveland For Your Post: |
11-29-2022, 05:09 PM | #7 | ||||||
|
I still can't understand why Missouri doesn't have split season. Most of our birds leave shortly after the season opens, but we find clusters of birds just a bit south of us in December while quail hunting...which I would definitely take if it was legal.
__________________
"Doubtless the good Lord could have made a better game bird than bobwhite, and better country to hunt him in...but equally doubtless, he never did." -- Guy de la Valdene (from A Handful of Feathers ) "'I promise you,' he said, 'on my word of honor, I won't die on the opening of the bird season.'" -- Robert Ruark (from The Old Man and the Boy) |
||||||
11-29-2022, 08:39 PM | #8 | ||||||
|
I have wild bird feeders in my front yard and although large numbers of doves have left our area I usually see five to a dozen doves eating discarded safflower seed out there. Maybe what I am seeing are transients? Not sure.
|
||||||
11-30-2022, 10:54 AM | #9 | ||||||
|
My understanding is that the birds that remain are almost all males. Later on we do get migratory birds. I find this to be true as 9 out of 10 birds I kill are males, as identified by the purple/pink marking on the sides of their necks. Late in the winter it is 100% male. There are certain farms I hunt where the birds congregate each year. Often by the hundreds. These are farms that have allowed dove hunting each year and thousands upon thousands have been killed there since I was a kid. But they come back. Other farms will have none. I find the key is that there is a power line through the fields where they may congregate and observe the ground before flying down to a predator. The last day I killed my limit was a place where I had finished hunting elsewhere the day before and drove by the field and it looked as if the power line would break as doves were lined up side by side for a quarter mile.
|
||||||
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Jerry Harlow For Your Post: |
11-30-2022, 05:58 PM | #10 | ||||||
|
I like to see those power lines swagging...charlie
|
||||||
|
|