Hi All
I received some criticism on my recent video about leaving a fox to suffer too long before the follow-up shot. That feedback is fair and well deserved — I felt terrible about it at the time.
For context, the person who took me out that night was extremely cautious about the potential risks of hitting the farmer’s cows in the neighbouring paddock or shooting in the direction of a road that runs along the back of the property (about 450m away). You can hear him telling me not to take a second shot in the video. He’s also the one who shot the other fox that got away after being hit, because he didn’t want to follow up with another round.
I want to be clear — I’m grateful to have been invited out, and I completely agree that caution and situational awareness are critical for safe shooting. But it was frustrating being told “it's too far away” or “be careful what's behind it” nearly every time we saw a fox in the distance — even after I explained I wouldn’t shoot unless it got to a certain spot and I had a completely clear backdrop (just open paddock and grass, no skyline).
So here’s my question to the group: Would you have taken this shot? Or at least considered it safe to take?
(Tripod-mounted .223)
To give you a rough visual:
The tree line in the image is where the road is (highlighted red) — about 400m from the fence line. We’re positioned roughly 50m on our side of the fence, and the fox is probably another 50-70m on the other side of it. It’s hard to judge exact distances with thermal, but there are no other heat signatures in frame, and the backstop is nothing but paddock grass.
I’d also love any further thoughts or advice on shooting over paddocks and general .223 ballistics.
Original video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePGI9cIC7eU