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one of us |
Some pictures I hope you enjoy This first one is AR member Jim aka Cropduster during his visit to Uruguay while zeroing my 9,3x62 Mario and his management red stag bagged last week in La Pampa with my 9,3x62, it was a running shot at 170 metres with the rifle zeroed by Jim. He zeroed the scope using 250 grainers Nosler's BT, I took to la Pampa some Barnes 250 gr thet Jim brought me as a present, I was so lucky that the Noslers's BT and the Barnes touch each other at 100 metres !!! This picture I took it in a friend's farm, that thing (I don't know the word in english) is full of corn and you can see the damaged produced by the wild boars during the night. A closer picture shows you how they cut the plastic to reach the corn. L | ||
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One of Us |
Thanks for the pictures. Maybe they need you and I to come down and shoot those boars. "When you play, play hard; when you work, don't play at all." Theodore Roosevelt | |||
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one of us |
Mmmm...from the pictures I can draw some conclusions : 1) Uruguayans need an American ( or argentine by the same token ) to make proper use of rifle technique. 2) Uruguayans are good at running shots...who knows why? 3) The 9.3x62 is an all-around uruguayan cartridge that only can work if handled by an American in argentine soil. 4) Wild Boars don't like uruguayans ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ColdBore 1.0 - the ballistics/reloading software solution http://www.patagoniaballistics.com | |||
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one of us |
Lorenzo: very interesting post. Perhaps next time we should put our blinds near the corn bags. I never thought about it before but it seems a sure thing. Years ago the recipe was checking the plastic water pipes in the dry areas. | |||
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