Oh yes, they ARE fun to hunt!
Back where you are, there's the eastern equivalent to our rockchucks, the eastern groundhog/woodchuck. Also a challenging quarry and just as shy. The best places here are usually deep river canyons that provide nice lush green plant growth for them. A century ago when ranchers here were clearing the lava rock for their fields, they stacked up large mounds of rocks, now home to these large burrowing rodents. Great for us, not so much for the ranchers.
A nice morning walkabout in the sage and junipers with my Cooper M38 20VT at a small local ranch:
The typical view in the sage and junipers. One must be in their best ninja mode or these very alert critters will spot you and bail down into the rocks, not to be seen for a spell afterwards.
My Anschutz 1715D HB 17HMR is great for the smaller places where the report of a CF rifle is not a good idea. I try to restrain myself when using the HMR and only use head shots to avoid any potential crawl-offs:
With the unseasonable warm weather we're having here now, the chucks are emerging all over their range. Here's a chuck mom with her new brood out exploring in the sunshine:
Right now myself and my rat shooting crew are gearing-up for an extended stay in the outback in our trailers camping on ranch property while thinning out the sage rats for the rancher who reports crop loss of up to $300K from the little alfalfa munchers.
It's bench time in the alfalfa for the sage rats. Much different than a day spent skulking about the sage and junipers scouting for the chucks.
The ranchers are always glad to see us, and we're always glad to be out there, rifles in hand. It's a win-win, and beaucoup fun!