Weatherby Vanguard 6.5 Creedmoor/Leupold VX-6 – 600 yards with 129 grain Nosler ABLR Hunting Bullet

Thanks to Weatherby, Leupold and Nosler, this shooting test is comprehensive as it marries the Weatherby Vanguard Weatherguard to a Leupold VX-6 3-18 44mm Gold Ring Scope and Nosler AccuBond bullets for deer hunting. Lets see how the marriage unfolds…

My friends at Nosler were out of stock for testing 129 grain AccuBond Long Range hunting bullets (very popular), but I found some on-line to test the Weatherby Vanguard Weatherguard with. This bullet has a G1 ballistic coefficient of 0.561 and exits the barrel around 2680 fps from a cold barrel. I hand-loaded the cartridge with 39 grains of RL 15 powder, a max load I had already proved-in at 1 MOA at 100 yards.  According to the Nosler reloading guide, RL 15 at 39 grains was the most accurate. My chronograph measured the first 3 shot spread was 10 fps  with an average velocity of 2680 fps. Later shots from a warmed barrel showed an increase in velocity and spread. Hunters don’t shoot with a warmed barrel. It is a cold shot that counts in the field, accordingly I was not overly concerned with the warmed barrel velocity variation.

Now to test that premise and data, I shot those first 4 rounds at 600 yards in prone position at Nashua NH Fish and Game 600 yard range. The shots had about a 6 inch spread left to right and had a vertical spread of around an inch. Very nice indeed! The wind was not a significant factor as it was a calm day. The bullet dropped 14 minutes from my 100 yard zero. Accordingly, I turned the Leupold VX-6 Turret up 14 minutes and I was on paper.

I had to adjust left and down to hit the bullseye. I am now sighted in for 600 yards, though I will limit my hunting shots to 400 yards or less. With the Leupold sight picture I was comfortable at 12x though my prone position felt very low to the ground. The value driven Weatherby Vanguard, with it high cheek rest and Monte-Carlo design aided greatly with my scope alignment height. I just can’t believe you can get this rifle new for under $600 bucks. The Leupold VX-6 however retails for nearly double what the rifle costs but it delivers the best clarity in low light at long range that I have ever experienced at this price point and with one twist go from 3x to 18x. Crazy good!

In a hunting situation I will be hopefully using shooting sticks, perhaps standing or kneeling. The delivered Kinetic Energy from the 24 inch Weatherby barrel at 400 yards is 1250 ft-lbs thereby providing excellent energy for penetration on a mature whitetail deer. The Nosler AccuBond was designed to mushroom with the lead bonded to the copper jacket, thus the bullet remains largely intact as it penetrates.  See the table from www.jbmballistics.com below. I could have shown more data at longer ranges but this works for a hunting situation I might expect.

Calculated Table
Range Drop Drop Windage Windage Velocity Mach Energy Time Lead Lead
(yd) (in) (MOA) (in) (MOA) (ft/s) (none) (ft•lbs) (s) (in) (MOA)
0 -1.5 *** 0.0 *** 2680.0 2.342 2057.0 0.000 0.0 ***
25 -0.6 -2.5 0.0 0.1 2640.7 2.308 1997.1 0.028 5.0 19.0
50 -0.1 -0.2 0.1 0.3 2601.7 2.274 1938.6 0.057 10.0 19.1
75 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.4 2563.1 2.240 1881.4 0.086 15.1 19.2
100 -0.0 -0.0 0.6 0.6 2524.8 2.207 1825.6 0.115 20.3 19.4
125 -0.5 -0.3 0.9 0.7 2486.8 2.173 1771.1 0.145 25.6 19.5
150 -1.3 -0.8 1.4 0.9 2449.1 2.141 1717.8 0.176 30.9 19.7
175 -2.4 -1.3 1.9 1.0 2411.8 2.108 1665.8 0.207 36.3 19.8
200 -4.0 -1.9 2.5 1.2 2374.8 2.076 1615.1 0.238 41.9 20.0
225 -5.9 -2.5 3.1 1.3 2338.0 2.043 1565.5 0.270 47.5 20.1
250 -8.2 -3.1 3.9 1.5 2301.6 2.012 1517.2 0.302 53.2 20.3
275 -10.9 -3.8 4.8 1.7 2265.5 1.980 1470.0 0.335 58.9 20.5
300 -14.1 -4.5 5.7 1.8 2229.8 1.949 1423.9 0.368 64.8 20.6
325 -17.7 -5.2 6.7 2.0 2194.3 1.918 1379.0 0.402 70.8 20.8
350 -21.7 -5.9 7.9 2.2 2159.2 1.887 1335.1 0.437 76.8 21.0
375 -26.2 -6.7 9.1 2.3 2124.3 1.857 1292.4 0.472 83.0 21.1
400 -31.2 -7.5 10.5 2.5 2089.8 1.827 1250.8 0.507 89.3 21.3

This marriage is bliss! It is one excellent deer hunting rig, a Weatherby Vanguard Weatherguard topped with a Leupold Gold Ring VX-6 in the recoil friendly 6.5 Creedmoor with Nosler AccuBond Bullets. This combination is perhaps much better from an accuracy standpoint than I will achieve in field  hunting conditions.

I retested the rounds at 100 yards after the 600 yard shoot and set the Leupold back to zero. The rifle shot a 3/4 inch 3 shot group with a cold barrel. Very pleased with that!!

It is up to you the hunter to set your limits within your capabilities. We owe that to the game we hunt!

Good Hunting!!

© 2018 All Rights Reserved.

 

Weatherby Vanguard – Why a Picatinny Rail? – Updated

I like my Weatherby Vanguard Weatherguard Rifle very much. It is not flashy, it is nearly waterproof and rust proof. The stock is synthetic and can take a beating in any weather. It is a serious hunters rifle. It has one of the best bolt actions in the industry. It is chambered in 6.5 Creedmoor, one of the finest target or hunting rounds in the world today. For under $600 dollars! Wow!

See my other Weatherby articles on this site.

One of the things that I will be improving however is the mounting of my scope. Many of us today depend on a Picatinny Rail for scope mounting. In my testing of this rifle, I discovered that you can purchase a Picatinny rail and solve some otherwise scope mounting issues. My favorite scope, a Leupold VX-6 scope needed to come rearward for the use of its high power without scope shadowing, however traditional rings, shown above, limited the rearward movement because of the scope bell shape. I solved this by purchasing a Picatinny rail from Tally Manufacturing, specifically designed for the Weatherby Vanguard. Mine includes a 20 MOA ramp for long range. See Photo added below with my favorite scope, a Leupold VX-6 3-18 x 44mm. Now the scope is far enough back for me to see with 18x with a full picture. Caution should be taken if you are shooting a heavy recoiling rifle as the rear of the scope can make a nice crescent cut in your forehead. Many of us learned that lesson the hard way!

http://www.talleymanufacturing.com/Products/Tactical/Picatinny-Rails/Weatherby/Picatinny-Base-for-Weatherby-Vanguard-(Short-A-(1).aspx

Good Shooting!

© 2018

 

 

 

 

Moon Phase Buck Hunting… and More – Myth or Reality

For years there are hunters (not me) who believe Moon Phases are important in determining the best time to hunt mature whitetail bucks who can be seen moving in day light. These hunters are some of the best in the world. Yet studies are showing that the bulk of mature buck movement still occur at dawn and dusk (known as crepuscular activity) according to QDMA (Quality Deer Management Association) and a myriad of deer and buck studies. See below. Join QDMA Today!

https://www.qdma.com/10-things-know-mature-buck-movements/

 

Ok after reading that, does it change your mind? Maybe so.  If you hunt by the Moon Phase and are successful are you going to stop using the Moon in your hunt calculations. Perhaps not. But the article and studies add to our knowledge base as hunters. Some of what I have read is simple common sense. Don’t muck up your deer stand before prime time. But if everyone else is mucking it up already, count your mature buck as nocturnal, no moon phase will change that. I found an area that had lots of deer activity, but it was all at night. Every other tree had a treestand in it. My cameras captured a buck at night…like a ghost in the distant blackness. There were very few deer taken there if any and narry a decent buck.

Years back I saw a trail of deer activity heading up a hill behind homes where I could not hunt, so I hunted the base of the hill. At pre-dawn I was on the ground waiting for light when footsteps approached and stopped just 25 yards from me. We both stood in silent darkness waiting for each to move. Finally the deer continued up the hill and I could not see him just hooves shooshing in the leaves. The following week I hunted afternoon with my recurve in a treestand not far from the encounter. It was a nice 8 point buck that came down the path but just out of my recurve kill range. I watched him get to an Oak tree with lots of nuts beneath it and could hear him gobble the acorns with the speed of lightning and darkness arrived. I sat for a few more minutes in the blackness listening to the buck eat like there was no tomorrow. As quiet as I could, I got down, the buck stopped eating, likely hearing me. I let the place cool off for a few day but did not see that buck again.

The QDMA report reinforces that bucks move at dawn and dusk. In my case above in late October the buck movement was at pre-dawn, before light and he was not chasing a doe. He was bedded before dawn, a nocturnal deer, almost.

I have killed several bucks, all without any Moon knowledge, all during the rut before November 10th except one on the 26th. One was rattled and grunted in, another was enticed out of his bed with scents, and the other 2 bucks were near does and nearby key trails where they appeared in mid morning and caused them to stand and move. I believe the buck was bedded so he could smell anything approaching. And two bucks I called in to bow range with a deer call, one a bleat and the other a grunt, both fell to a well placed broadhead.

In all cases, the November deer were killed during the day and not far from the does. I have seen 2 does on separate occasions go into buck bedding areas. One doe headed in at 9AM and the other at dusk. I believe seeking to be mated. I mean the ladies were just going right into their bedroom.

A mature buck according to QDMA is 4 1/2 years or greater. I have never seen a mature buck but once in New Brunswick, Canada and he bested me. He was huge of body, full neck and brisket, a bit of a pot belly and a solid set of antlers, usually more than 8 points. Like the image below.

Photo Getty Images.

New Hampshire deer are not as numerous as in New Jersey and Pennsylvania by a long shot and tend to be harvested in the southern part of the state as 1 1/2 and 2 1/2 year old deer and a few 3 1/2 year. Yes there are 4 1/2 year old deer down here but you will likely never see them. Deer in the northern part of the state require great effort and that is were you find the 4 1/2 year old bucks who cover lots of territory. Hunt them in snow looking for large buck tracks like the Benoit’s for success but be ready to walk miles and drag your 250 pound deer for miles. These are places where hunting partners are a necessity.

I am now interested in Moon Phases as novelty but one thing is for sure, if you believe something will happen, as in seeing a mature deer because a Moon chart says so,  then your senses are keen, sharp and observant where otherwise you may walk within feet of a bruiser and never see him.

If moon charts increase your alertness then maybe that is all you need, a belief that it will happen. There will be many times where you see little or nothing, so having an edge perhaps helps.

Places like Alberta and Saskatchewan place corn to draw deer and bucks from far off places so you hunt often from a blind. If the years previous was good for deer then you will be in luck without any moon or in years past where there was heavy deep snow the herd took a beating.

Deer, particularly bucks that know they are being hunted are very very wary indeed. It is food and the urge to mate in the Rut that is their major Achilles heel in making them occasionally visible. If, during the rut, there are does nearby and buck scrapes, where bucks place their calling card of urine and tarsal gland then in NH non-urine based deer scents are suggested as a great tool to create curiosity or I have taken a baggie and small spade with me and collected dirt from local scrapes and freeze it. Snow laden beds and scrapes are places to collect deer odors too.

A recent NH deer kill at a check in station may be a place to ask a friend who is checking in their deer for a tuft of tarsal gland from a buck or doe.

So be alert, be ready! Moon or not! Think hunt the Rut where rattling grunting and scents work the best. I have purchased a non-urine based scent called REALDEER™ and bowhunters I spoke to in Ohio say it works as an attractant and cover scent.  I will be using it this year. I can’t say it works for me yet but time will tell.

Good Hunting!

© 2018

 

Why I am Hunting Free Range South Texas Whitetail Bucks in Low Fence Ranches?

Back in 2014, Dr. Dave Samuel’s (wrote for Bowhunter Magazine and an acquaintance of mine at a Hunter-Ed workshop) who is a bow and rifle hunter as well as a PhD Wildlife Biologist wrote a piece that is worth reading. Bergman’s Rule is that the body size must grow larger as you go north. Is that true for antlers too?

https://www.grandviewoutdoors.com/big-game-hunting/are-the-biggest-antlers-farther-north/

Quote from Dr. Dave Samuel article; “The fact that many south Texas ranches do not allow bucks less than 4 or 5 years of age to be harvested is one of the reasons that area produces some really good bucks year after year. Managing bucks so that you get older age classes is one reason that, relative to antler size, Bergmann’s Rule falls flat in Texas. Management trumps latitude.

Throughout deer range, soils and good feed explains antler size more than Bergmann’s Rule. Hunters, leasers, land owners and land managers can do a lot to get healthier and heavier bucks and does on their properties, no matter where they are. Managing habitat and the deer is why we find big bucks and healthier deer scattered all over whitetail range.” end quote

So Texas ranches are sort of like counties in northern states. They run from a few thousand acres to 80 thousand acres or more. They often manage cattle along with whitetails and other wild game.

Making money is a capitalist thing to do. If you can manage food and cover and a healthy “wild” land, you can hunt birds, Turkeys, Havalina, Wild Boar, Whitetails and Mule deer for hunters and make a good living from the Earth and lifelong friendships too.

My hunt style is to use the Rut to Rattle in a wary buck! I want to hunt him naturally…so we are on a more equal footing. There lies the challenge and if I do my part, the reward as well, will come. Maybe a big antlered buck has your name on it.

Common in south Texas is the prickly pear cactus (formally Opuntia), a food source for whitetails including many oak species of acorns and browse. Supplemental feeding and feed crop growth keeps them healthy, though if your a true purist you will find your true wild spaces are shrinking rapidly unless you have the funds.

Opuntia littoralis var vaseyi 4.jpg

Image courtesy of Wikipedia with fruit.

Spending money here in the USA is also a great thing for our Economy!

Good Hunting!

© 2018

 

 

 

 

 

Use non Urine Based Scents says NHFG – CWD Update

Today NH Fish and Game strongly urges that you not use bottled natural urine based deer attraction scents to prevent Chronic Wasting Disease in NH. So do your homework if you use scents New Hampshire. There are many synthetics on the market. Having said that; I have used scents all of my deer hunting life. And I still do, just avoid the urine based scents. See update below if you are planning to ship your meat or cape home. Rules apply!

https://www.wildlife.state.nh.us/wildlife/cwd/facts.html

 

http://cwd-info.org/map-chronic-wasting-disease-in-north-america/ 

CWD in North America

 

My Study Up for Deer Hunting…Oh And Scent Control…

As my readers know, I am off to Texas in late October for a Whitetail Trophy Hunt of a Lifetime. I have been thinking about my hunt ever since in booked it a month or so ago. We all like to think we are great hunters and we are, but the deer are better at it than you and I. We can only do our best and Study Up!

First and foremost for me is to FIND JOY IN THE HUNT and in the new friendships I will encounter. Have Fun with new friends and surroundings!

If the Spirit is right and you are willing, and you do your part, all will come together for great memories.

Having said that; I must put my student hat on and find out as much as possible on Large Racked Texas Whitetails and the way in which I intend to primarily hunt them. I prefer being an active hunter trying to do things such as Rattling and Grunting in combination with scents when the rut is just beginning. Having knowledge of prevailing wind, bedding areas and travel routes of both bucks and does can help put me in a favorable wind position.

Find the does and their bedding areas my friends and you will find the bucks not far away. Many of you are aware that Texas put “Antler Rattling” on the Whitetail Map of North America decades ago but few northern hunters use it well. I have used rattling and grunting for years and have had success taking New Hampshire Bucks. A secret piece of the hunting in Texas is that many Trophy Hunter use the position and phases of the Moon in their hunt plans. I have not used the Moon in the past but am becoming a believer, but, even with that skill,  being scent free is perhaps one of the most important parts of hunting mature deer.

Your scent is your worst enemy!

Stay clean, your boots inside too as well as outside. New science places bacteria at the core of the odor issue. Your hair, your hat, your face washed, back of your neck, arm pits, groin and feet need special attention. I believe body pH plays a part too. I killed a buck that walked near me (20 yards) after I doused myself and some in my hair with baking soda.  Suppress and eliminate bacteria caused odor and you will be miles ahead. Do your own research too, don’t take my word for it. Mouth breath with bacteria can alarm deer, some folks use hydrogen peroxide to rinse the mouth and kill bacteria, I use it when brushing my teeth. Now I will use it in the woods too.

Here is a youtube video that is one of the best I have seen for reducing scent.

 

Below uses anti-microbial silver with carbon. Wow! Gonna give this a try.

Good Hunting!

Don’t stink in the deer woods!

 

 

Nosler Trophy Grade Ammo with Nosler AccuBond Bullets

I have been a proponent of Nosler Partition, E-Tip and AccuBond for hunting big game for years. Most of my hunting was done with ammo that I loaded myself. So why use their Trophy Grade Ammo? The above video tells the story. Most importantly their hunting ammo is the finest in the world and is very cost effective at around $ 40 to 50 dollars for 20 rounds. When it comes down to an expensive hunt and you have just one shot, the use of Nosler Trophy Grade ammo is just what the doctor ordered. They provides smooth feeding in your rifle action and a fast followup shot if needed.

My friends at Nosler sent me 140 grain Nosler AccuBonds in 6.5 Creedmoor to test and write about for my Texas Whitetail hunt this fall. They will exit the rifle barrel at around 2650 and deliver deer killing energy out to 600 yards. My Weatherby Vanguard Weatherguard rifle shoots them at 2750 fps. Nice!

Below is a ballistic gel test that is a tell all. Wow!

I did my own penetration test on this 800 lb bison years back. He was quartering away and walking at around 100 yards. I had only seconds to shoot. I found a sapling to brace my rifle and let loose a 260 grain AccuBond from my .375 Ruger. The bullet struck the last rib on the right and plowed forward into lungs and heart. It struck the bone on the far shoulder and plowed through it and fully exited the animal. The bull fell dead as a door nail in 20 feet.

Because the lead is bonded to the copper the AccuBond retains a large portion of its original weight. You get Controlled Expansion and High Weight Retention.

Good Hunting!

© 2018

 

 

Trophy Bucks? Texas Dreamin’

I just love whitetail antlers especially symmetrical antlers, what we call “Typical” antlers. Non- Typical Antlers are often a mish-mash of points having little symmetry. Some like it, but I am not one of them.

I have taken bucks that were 8 or 9 points and a number of lesser bucks and many does. We eat everything we kill and so do my hunting friends.

I am not a quote unquote trophy hunter per se but when I run across a big buck, I don’t hesitate.

I am going to the Lone Star State to try to bag a big-un’ according to Boone and Crockett where the average mature whitetail antler rack is much larger in size on average. This is due to great management practices which include three factors, age, genetics and food.

https://wildlifesystems.com/whitetail.html

I get to bring home the meat too and have 2 doe management tags.

These deer are older and wiser at 4 1/2 and 5 1/2 years and sport average racks of 130 points and there are enough deer to see a few 150 and 160 class deer. It is up to you to be ready if or when the chance arrives.

So here you are on the hunt and you are in pop-up blind and it is an hour from sunset. The does are coming from all around to feed in the field you are in. There are two nice bucks in the 130 class that are feeding with the does and check them out. Your thinking about taking one of these…

Your guide say’s hold on, there may be a  bigger buck coming. What!

Your heart-rate just jumped and adrenaline is pouring into your body. Now only 1/2 hour to darkness and two more deer enter the field. Are they bucks? Yep. They look the same you say?

Maybe not!  It is here that homework may help in quickly judging your trophy deer before the last photons of light are swallowed by the night.

Field and Stream has a great article to help you quickly judge;

https://www.fieldandstream.com/photos/gallery/kentucky/2006/07/how-judge-buck-can-you-guess-score-these-10-bc-trophies#page-6

Outdoor Life has a great article too; https://www.outdoorlife.com/blogs/game-changers/deer-hunting-4-things-look-when-snap-judging-buck-field

Practice, Practice, Practice!

Maybe look like this buck from the same ranch last year, all smiles by Randy Bailey.   Photo from Wildlife Systems website above.

Or maybe this one taken by Bill Ewanis! Photo from Wildlife Systems website above.

 

Maybe me this fall with my Weatherby Vanguard Weatherguard in 6.5 Creedmoor, Nosler AccuBonds and my favorite scope, a Leupold VX-6.

Good Hunting!

© 2018

 

 

 

The Importance of the Campfire

The importance of a campfire in a camping experience was brought to my attention as a boy growing up and later on my African Hunting Safari years ago. In Africa, the campfire had true meaning to hold at bay the creatures of the night who wanted to eat you. Just out of the light they lurked, a twig or branch that snapped really got your attention. “Hurry, put another log on the fire!” you said! The campfire gave you a measure of safety from the night and a place to cook your food.

To look into the flaming pulsating embers of a campfire, is to look back in time nearly a million years ago when our ancestors used the fire not just for light and protection from the night, but also for story telling, dreaming, reminiscing and entertainment.

Hunters who gather after a day afield get to tell the story of their day. This is true for most all outdoor people as well but my focus is on the Hunter. It is here that humor is created at a missed shot and the dumb things we sometimes do. It is also a place to revere bravery or a clean shot on wild game by the hunter. In essence it can be a place to bond and unwind from the day as well as protect you from the night.

Here in New England during my childhood, my family like all others at the time did not have air conditioning or could not afford it. Families often cooked and lived outside in the heat of summer. It was a social time that was essential for my outdoor upbringing. At night as kids we often ate marshmallows, made samoas with chocolate and graham cracker sandwiches of a warm and often burned marshmallow over an open campfire. We told stories too.

Later as a downhill skier in the back woods of New Hampshire we created a fire for warmth and food at night deep in the backfield slopes of my neighborhood. I loved to cook my hot dogs on a branch that I cut with my own knife. A basic woodsman’s skill my dad taught me.

As a father and grandfather it is a pleasurable experience with grandchildren to sit around a campfire, cook marshmallows and hot dogs and grin a happy grin.

So don’t forget the value of having a campfire for yourself or your family. It is a place also to grow and dream about far off places and adventure.

Good Hunting!

© 2018

Bore Sighting your New Hunting Scope on your Hunting Rifle?

This article is for most bolt action rifles where you can remove the bolt and look down the bore. Lasers are valuable if you can’t bore sight.

Here is the Sight-in Rule of Thumb for 25 yards for a 1/4″ per click at 100 yard scopes:

4 clicks moves the crosshair 1 inch at 100 yards (indicated on your scope dial or caps)

Most importantly at 25 yards it takes 16 clicks to move the crosshair 1 inch.

Here is a simple method I use when bore sighting a hunting scope that has 1/4 inch per click at 100 yards:

  1. Bench rest your rifle front and rear with sand bags so it is stable and points to the target without much effort.
  2. Remove the bolt and look through the rifle bore at a 25 yard target bullseye
  3. Now without moving the rifle (much) , look through the scope.
  4. Observe where the crosshairs are when the bore is on target. They could be very far off the bullseye, e.g., high, low, left or right.
  5. Dial the cross hairs up or down (don’t listen to the clicks, just rotate the dial) without moving the rifle so the bore and crosshairs are on the bullseye.
  6. Ok, if you believe both crosshairs and bore are close then take a shot at the 25 yard target.
  7. Now your bullet struck 3 inches low and 2 inches left. Not bad, your on paper! But you want to hit the bullseye! For 25 yards you must rotate your elevation dial 4 times as much or 16 clicks for every inch you are off the target. Thus 3 inches x 16 clicks/inch = 48 clicks. I know… that is a lot of clicks right?
  8. Now move the windage crosshair 2 inches to the right or 16 clicks/inch x 2 inches=32 clicks.
  9. Shoot a single round…and believe!
  10. Move your target to 100 yards and shoot a single round. Your bullet is 2 inches right and 2 inches high. At 100 yards each click is 1/4 inch. Adjust windage left 8 clicks and elevation 8 clicks down. Fire a shot!
  11. At this time you should be very close to the bullseye and you have only shot 3 rounds. Now with your best sand bag bench rest shoot three shots and see what kind of group sizes you are shooting. Today’s rifle’s often shoot 1 inch groups or better, which is the same as 1 minute of angle (MOA) or better.
  12. If you are near to 1 or 2 inch groups then find ammo that will shoot to your liking for the game you are after.

Personally I would not hunt deer size game with a bolt action rifle that shot worse than 2 inches from a bench rest at 100 yards, but that is just me. Most new rifles are capable of so much better with the right load… so experiment. I strive for at least 1 inch groups.

Using a ballistic calculator for longer distances helps. I use www.jbmballistics.com

At longer distances, wind become a very large factor.

Good Shooting!

© 2018 All Rights Reserved.