Where to hunt Prairie Dogs
Prairie dogs are, as everyone knows, not dogs, but a kind of rodent. They have been called so for their specific alarm call, that resembles yaps of a dog. This alarm call signal is said to be highly sophisticated: it can render not just that a predator is approaching, but what predator, at what distance, and from which direction. Prairie dogs live in large colonies, known as “towns”, all over the Great Plains in the USA and Northern Mexico.
Price distribution
Prairie dog hunting is not particularly expensive. Most outfitters charge from $200 to $500 a hunter a day. In fact, your most significant expense item will probably be ammunition: prairie dog hunting involves a lot of shooting, and on a good day near a populous prairie dog town it’s not uncommon to fire several hundred rounds.
When to hunt Prairie Dogs?
In most states and provinces prairie dogs can be hunted all year round. The best time for hunting prairie dogs is held to be the break of spring and summer. Some diehard antelope and mule deer hunters will set out after prairie dogs before the start of the big-game hunting season, to dust off their long-range marksmanship, but the summer heat makes the rodents spend more time in their burrows, to say nothing of its effect on the hunter.
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