PEAX Equipment

Washington lion

Dunning Kruger

Well-known member
Joined
May 9, 2019
Messages
567
Got this female lion in ferry county wa on dec 5th. Called her in making calm fawn bleats. Calling for about 23 minutes, when i noticed some really slow movement in my peripheral vision. She was creeping up on me on the other side of a thick bush just 5 paces away. It was my 8th or 9th attempt calling lions for the year.20191213_205843.jpg20191205_083032-800x600.jpg
 
Wow very cool!

So how he heck did you get a shot off to your side that close without it running off?
 
Wow very cool!

So how he heck did you get a shot off to your side that close without it running off?

I barely managed. Its all really fuzzy, but heres how it is, far as i can tell. It was right there on top of me, brush in the way. When i realized what it was, i swung my gun toward her slowly, the only thought in my head being that i was scared she was going to run when i pointed my rifle

She was walking straight on to me when i saw her. With my scope all the way down to 2x, it still took me what seemed like a long time to get fur in my scope, and i shot, not even knowing point of aim. I knew every second counted, and i had a damn lion about to pounce on me, so i wasnt being picky, just shoot fur.

So despite her being head on when i saw her, it took a few seconds to get fur in scope, and somehow i ended up shooting her perfectly broadside, but a bit high. Entrance wound was on her right side, exit on her left. Only thing i can figure is, when i lifted my gun, she turned 90° getting ready to run, and i hit her right before she bailed. That explains the broadside shot, and my difficulty getting her in my scope. But really, its all kind of a blur to me, but thats the best explanation i got. I puzzled over the whole thing myself.

I didnt even figure out what happened until the following day when i thought about it rationally, how it was facing me when i saw it, where the entrance and exit wounds were, it didnt add up at first. I was just so hyped on adrenaline i guess, i wasnt operating at full mental capacity, even for me. When i met up with a game warden a few hours after i made the kill to have the hide sealed, and he asked male or female, i didnt even know. Thats how scrambled my brain was, i didnt even lift her legs to check, i just threw her over my shoulder and packed her out whole, guts and all, a half mile. Even with a completely empty stomsch and not much fat, that was still a 90lb animal i carried out no problem thanks to the adrenaline rush. Really, i was geeked bad.
 
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Love it! Saw my first lion this year and now I want one. I’m very jealous but not sure I’d have the stones required to be that close....not that you had a choice in the matter :)
 
Love it! Saw my first lion this year and now I want one. I’m very jealous but not sure I’d have the stones required to be that close....not that you had a choice in the matter :)

Just call where they cant bust ya until theyre point blank, then the size of your stones is irrelevant, youre in the situation regardless. I pack average sized stones. Im no jim corbett 😉
 
Closed reed call. Its the chunk of ivory with a lion track carved on it in front of the stump in the second picture.20200205_114624-800x450.jpg
 
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Wow. That’s something that’ll stick with you forever. Nice work.
 

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