Why the time warp thing is absent during the drive out to Wyoming and is painfully present once I get there is beyond me.
Soon we were joined by Curtis Kellar, who'd also made record time in joining us. The short days ahead would resound with bull sessions and the loud "whop" of blunt arrows finding their mark on the ever present ground squirrels.
It was good practice for all of us and Curtis especially needed to grow accustomed to shooting with additional layers of clothing... he adapted just fine.
Often we hunted in pairs or even all together... ground squirrels offer those kinds of opportunities.
Near some old corrals we found the squirrels quite abundant and circled off in our own separate directions to see what we could see.
I made a couple of hits and a few misses... if ground squirrels are anything, it's fast!
A little haphazard at first (by ground squirrel standards), we soon cleaned up the slop and were thumping the little squeekers on a fairly regular basis.
Since this was the shake down part of this trip and we were fine tuning for bigger things we also tripped off to the mountains for some broken ground shooting at more severe angles.
Stump shooting in these mountains not only includes a wealth of stumps, but for the imaginative, the trees are full of snarling mountain lions... of the pinecone variety.
We all got in on the pinecone action...
(cont.)