Fun in The Rat Patch

Rick in Oregon

Well-known member
We just returned from a ten day shoot in the Orygun outback thinning out the ground squirrels for our alfalfa ranchers. It was a grand time, rats flew, smiles prevailed. Calibers ranged from 22LR, 17HMR, K-Hornet, 221FB, 20VT, 223, 7mm PRC.

As we were leaving HQ heading out, I spied this guy at my "chuck barometer". Seemed like a good omen.



I'll share a few pics from the trip. I've got about 200 of them, so just a few to post for the crew here. This one shows one ranch that had more squirrel mounds than we've seen in a while. Considering each mound has a family of rats below, you can imagine how many of the little buggers are really there.

Rifle on the bench at the time is my Anschutz 1715D HB in 17HMR;



Setup is easy....park truck, set up bench, shoot varmint. Nothing fancy. Simple, right? ;)



My Cooper M38 Varmint in 20VT got much use on the trip, accounting for a truckload of rats.



The rock escarpment has a colony of rockchucks. Dan nailed one with his 7PRC at a lasered 600.6 yards at the far end of the outcropping. Dan is in black with his spotting scope scanning for chucks.



This little female rat has her borrow just outside my trailer window, same place I saw her last year. She got a pass just 'cuz she's cute and a good squirrel model.



This setup allowed shooting as far as your rifle is capable. Rats were everywhere providing good LR targets.



We usually clean our rifle in the field and rotate hot ones for cool ones. Truck tailgate is a perfect cleaning platform.



My casual rat shooting setup in camp, as camp bordered a good rat field that had just been harrowed. Locating the brown squirrels in all that dirt was a challenge, but big fun anyway.



We lost two days of shooting due to high 30mph winds. When we left, the area got rain and winds at 40mph, so we considered ourselves fortunate to get a decent shooting window which as we all know doesn't happen all the time.

Time to unpack and get those empty cases back into action as the season is just getting started. :)
 
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We just returned from a ten day shoot in the Orygun outback thinning out the ground squirrels for our alfalfa ranchers. It was a grand time, rats flew, smiles prevailed. Calibers ranged from 22LR, 17HMR, K-Hornet, 221FB, 20VT, 223, 7mm PRC.

As we were leaving HQ heading out, I spied this guy at my "chuck barometer". Seemed like a good omen.



I'll share a few pics from the trip. I've got about 200 of them, so just a few to post for the crew here. This one shows one ranch that had more squirrel mounds than we've seen in a while. Considering each mound has a family of rats below, you can imagine how many of the little buggers are really there.

Rifle on the bench at the time is my Anschutz 1715D HB in 17HMR;

View attachment 872

Setup is easy....park truck, set up bench, shoot varmint. Nothing fancy. Simple, right? ;)

View attachment 873

My Cooper M38 Varmint in 20VT got much use on the trip, accounting for a truckload of rats.

View attachment 874


The rock escarpment has a colony of rockchucks. Dan nailed one with his 7PRC at a lasered 600.6 yards at the far end of the outcropping. Dan is in black with his spotting scope scanning for chucks.



This little female rat has her borrow just outside my trailer window, same place I saw her last year. She got a pass just 'cuz she's cute and a good squirrel model.



This setup allowed shooting as far as your rifle is capable. Rats were everywhere providing good LR targets.



We usually clean our rifle in the field and rotate hot ones for cool ones. Truck tailgate is a perfect cleaning platform.



My casual rat shooting setup in camp, as camp bordered a good rat field that had just been harrowed. Locating the brown squirrels in all that dirt was a challenge, but big fun anyway.



We lost two days of shooting due to high 30mph winds. When we left, the area got rain and winds at 40mph, so we considered ourselves fortunate to get a decent shooting window which as we all know doesn't happen all the time.

Time to unpack and get those empty cases back into action as the season is just getting started. :)
Set up camp, and I'm in heaven.
 
Just for grins, a few more random shots from the recent foray to the outback here recently with friends and small caliber rifles.

A shot of Dan with his AR equipped with thermal capabilities, ready for nighttime badger work.



And one more badger the landowner won't have to deal with in his field after Dan's nighttime foray.



Random shot while taking a break barrel cooling of my bench POV during frisky rat shooting. My Cooper M38 Phoenix on the bench with Nosler 40gr Varmageddon's over A2200 doing the deed.



Dan in the early morning at his bench working the rats over with his M700 HB laminated 223 shooting Nosler 50gr BT's. Dan has stretched the range of that rifle on another trip to just a tad over 700 yards.



Shooting buddy Garth also having his way with Skippy and his pals with Gary's Ruger No.3 22 Hornet.



Squirrel mounds everywhere indicating a very healthy population of squirrels. When we see fields like this, it really adds to the excitement for a target-rich environment. :)



And a parting shot of our favorite rodent...."Skippy the Flying Squirrel" who makes these trips worth the time and expense, generating beaucoup fun and a bit less crop loss for our rancher buddy. Pic taken with my Nikon DSLR with a 300mm lens, as no way can you get this close to these critters.



Another great trip, now a fond memory of good times afield with good friends. (y)
 
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