In Africa on my second safari I made a couple of very long shots (370 and 440 yards) with my PH's 270 WSM wearing a tactical scope worth as much as a good used truck. But that was the equipment. I didn't think either shot was particularly difficult. I once tracked a bull moose into a big alder thicket and shot him asleep in his bed at less than twenty yards just before dark. An incredible stealthy stalk but Helen Keller could have made that shot.
Perhaps the most challenging was not one but three shots. Three years ago I was hunting pheasants in Montana in temps hovering just above zero F and with a steady wind out of the northwest. Too cold for little French Brittany "Puppy" so I left her in the Jimmy and just hunted my black Lab Ellie. We pushed up a few birds but they were jumpy and no shots. After about an hour and a half I had to call it a day. That wind was taking a toll on my face and hands. Not worth it. On days like that a wrenched knee or broken ankle could be fatal. Most of the time I was in cell range but by the time help could come out from town I'd be done for. Time to quit. I was walking the road back to the vehicle and Ellie was trotting along in front fifteen yards or so. The road curved around a brushy ditch and I could barely make out Ellie around the corner locked up on point. I had plenty of time to catch up to her and get ready. Any late season bird that holds that well is probably a hen (not legal). But no! Up jumps three roosters, all squawking. The first shot was quartering away in thick willows. I saw him flutter down and pulled to the one on my left going straight away in the open and crushed it. Third bird was in the wind by then and too far for a shot. Ellie couldn't see the first one drop so she charged off after the second. I pulled the lined buckskin glove from my right hand to reach into my vest pocket for a shell to reload. Just then two more roosters jumped up from the same spot. I dropped the glove and shell and nailed one that fell just off the road to my left. Ellie picked up the first bird and ran to the second. She alternated picking up and dropping them, trying to bring both in at once. I walked to her and helped resolve the dilemma. Put one bird in the vest and let her parade around proudly with the other for a few minutes. We couldn't find the first rooster. He was obviously crippled and too much scent in the area. Went to the Jimmy down the road a half mile, warmed up, had a snack, then let both dogs out and we went back for that rooster. Had to find it! After a half hour or so Puppy finally ran it down and pinned it against a big cottonwood trunk until Ellie could catch up and make the retrieve. That is my only pheasant triple in a lifetime of hunting. Very difficult to achieve because 1) it requires an empty bag [three rooster daily limit]; 2) it requires finding three roosters in the same spot and in those lean years that was a
very rare occurrence (during the previous three years of hunting six weeks each season I had filled my daily limit just once); 3) it requires shooting a gun that can actually fire three shots (most aficionados MUST hunt with O/U because shooting uolands with an auto or pump shotgun is ... well ... just plain trashy); and it requires skill shooting moving targets that are hard to knock down and fly erratically, especially in the wind. Oh, and I almost forgot ... it requires a good dog. Add to that the handicap of being more than half frozen, nearly worn out, and fighting the wind. That was a very special day.
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PS: Lost the fancy black buckskin glove. It should have been right there at my feet with the loaded shell. A wood nymph must have stole it. Wish she'd hung around for a more intimate visit. Sigh! The cap is a Salvation Army Store special. Lost my safari cap a few days earlier. Have no idea who or what TD&H is.