Hunting the Lepus

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JimT
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Hunting the Lepus

Post by JimT »

Lepus californicus, Lepus townsendii & Lepus alleni
(from the old Sixgunner.Com website)

I eased my way across the dry wash and up through the brush, my gun ready. I had been following this critter for an hour and he had not given me a clean shot yet, but I knew if I was persistent sooner or later he was going to. Coming down a hillside my daughter whispered "Dad! Over there!" pointing across a ravine. There he sat near a prickly pear about 120 yards away, confident that he was hidden. I sat down and leaned back on my left elbow, raising my right knee and laying the pistol alongside it to steady it. I put the sights on the animal as he sat silently there and squeezed the trigger. At the shot I saw him jump into the air and then I heard a "whap." He turned and hopping slightly went out of sight behind some Spanish Dagger. The shaking of the brush told the story.. he was down for good. We made our way over to where he lay, a huge old Antelope Jackrabbit, Lepus alleni.
antelope1.jpg
Antelope Jackrabbit

There are 3 species of Jackrabbit in the lower 48 States, Lepus californicus - the Blacktailed Jack and the most common; Lepus townsendii - the Whitetail Jack which is found mostly from Colorado northward into Canada; and Lepus alleni - the Antelope Jack which is found only in Southern Arizona. (Technically I guess these are not really a rabbit but actually a hare if you want to nit-pick.) I have hunted all 3 species and found them to be tough, cunning and capable game. The Whitetail Jacks that I hunted in Colorado were every bit as tough as the Blacktails and Antelopes that I hunted in Arizona. I learned as a young boy to stalk close, take your time and put the bullet in the right spot, or you were probably going to lose the rabbit. I have seen Jacks take a solid hit from a .45 Colt, be disemboweled, and still run 50 or 60 yards. If they grew as large as deer we would probably have to hunt them with .458 Magnums.

The name "jackrabbit" as applied to these creatures was originally "jackass rabbit" due to their large ears. This was later shortened by common usage to "jackrabbit". They have wonderful hearing, great eyesight and are very fast. The Antelope Jack is the fastest of the three and have been clocked at speeds in excess of 40 mph. Growing to 8 pounds or more, these big guys can jump 15 feet in one leap. The only native American animal that can outrun an Antelope Jack is... an Antelope.

In the summers I used to go up to my friend Robert Smythe's Heart Bar Ranch in Colorado and spend a week shooting Jackrabbits. They were mainly the Whitetailed variety. A dozen of these critters can eat about as much as a cow, and Lord help you if they get into your haystacks! Robert told me one winter he stopped counting after he got to 100 of them coming out from under his hay.
whitetail1.jpg
Colorado Whitetail Jackrabbit

I would pile in the truck with several different guns and lots of ammo and go shoot Jacks for awhile on his ranch. I used everything from .22's up to heavy-loaded .45 Colts. Unless you busted them through the shoulders they would usually run quite a way after being hit. Using Stingers and Yellow Jackets in the .22 Single Six I dropped a number of them but still remember one that ran over 1/4 mile before dropping after I put a Yellow Jacket through it's lungs. Of all the .22's the SGB made up on Hanned's tool worked the best. Robert kept track and of 100 Jacks shot one winter using the SGB, he counted 51 one-shot stops where the rabbit dropped immediately.

The Blacktail Jack is the most common and most often seen of the Jackrabbits. Not as large as the other two it will still get up to 5 pounds or so and can run at speeds of over 30 mph. It makes for a challenging hunt. Paco Kelly and I hunted them with .454 Casull's when the guns were first introduced. Paco showed me that "close was good enough" with the .454. One day we came up to the top of a ravine and there, down in the bottom was a large Jackrabbit. Paco dropped the hammer on him and when the dust cleared the rabbit was laying there dead. We made our way down to it and found that his 260 gr. slug at near 2000 fps had missed the rabbit but all the shrapnel from the slug and the rocks had dropped it in it's tracks.
blacktail2.jpg
Blacktail Jackrabbit

I loaded some 180 gr. 45 ACP hollowpoints in the .454 over as much H-110 as I could get in the case. I actually deformed the bullet noses trying to compress the powder charge. They were not accurate but boy were they fast! (This is a stage some people go through when they first get a .454 - "How Fast Can I Get It To Go?" Fortunately I survived it and grew out of it without doing anything worse than burning the throat out of the barrel.)

Using these loads I got up close to a big Blacktail Jack. He was sitting on his haunches with his back toward me. At about 20 yards I leveled the sights of the Freedom Arms 7 1/2" on him and touched it off. There was a huge roar, a massive dust cloud, and something flew waaaaaay up into the air to my right. It went up about 20 feet and landed further than than away. I went up to where the Jack was sitting and all I could find was "stuff" hanging from the bushes..........

I went over to see what had gone up into the air and found it was his head. We didn't eat that rabbit. He was already reduced to ground meat but it would have taken so long to collect it all that it wasn't worth the bother.

And we did eat Jackrabbits, but only in the Spring when the grass was still on and it was still cool. Dad would grind the meat and make a sandwich spread with it. He was living on the Spear S Ranch near New River, AZ in those days and we would use it for when we were out working and had to take a lunch along. I remember it was quite tasty.

I have not shot a Jackrabbit in years. Back in the 1980's there was a disease hit them in Arizona and the population dropped quite a ways. I had several that lived near our place and I protected them, letting them raise their young in peace. The last time I hunted in Arizona the population of Jacks seemed to be coming back, but I do not know that for sure. Those who live there would know better than I.
I do know that I like the Jacks! They helped me to learn how to hunt, how to stalk, and how smart and elusive wild things are. I will always be grateful.
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GunnyMack
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by GunnyMack »

The Jacks were always a fascinating critter to me as a kid when we would visit my grandmother summers in the south Lake Tahoe area. All I could get my hands on was a wrist rocket, I kept them on their toes!
Then when I moved to CO, I didn't shoot them as we had prairie dogs galore. However I picked up a 17 Remington and as I was sighting it in a cotton tail hopped out at 50 yards. I settled the crosshairs on its shoulder. As I broke the shot the guy with me hit the ground laughing saying 'did you see that!?' over and over . I hadn't as the little 25 grainer at 4040fps moved the gun enough, anyhow it too was a shredded mess, skinned from paws to ears and just turned to jello. It had gone airborne with a few seconds of hang time.
I always remember my Dad telling me about when he was running the Minden NV airport when the Jacks had an outbreak of toluremia, the guys would pile into a pickup and spotlight the wabbits on the runway and shoot them with 22s by the dozens every evening.
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jeepnik
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by jeepnik »

This has been my go to for jacks since the 70’s.
Ole Bunny Killer.
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Last edited by jeepnik on Sun Nov 13, 2022 9:57 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by gamekeeper »

Their relative the Brown Hare over here is almost a magical beast, I once watched a whole pack of Beagles plus the hunters and a crowd of followers walk right over a Brown Hare only for it to emerge from the ground after they passed and silently sneak away unseen by only my wife and I.
Jim, I loving reading about your hunting stories your words paint a picture in my mind and I can almost smell the smoke.. :D
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Rockrat
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by Rockrat »

When I moved to CO, I had a load of stuff I was taking to the new house. On the side of a hill, there must have been 100+ Jacks. Never seen so many in one place. Few years later, I hardly ever saw a Jackrabbit and still haven't 30 years later.
samsi
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by samsi »

There was a big die-off of jacks and squirrels around these parts around a dozen years ago, distemper was what I heard. They seem to be making a slow comeback so I've refrained from going gunning for them - but one of these days!
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earlmck
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by earlmck »

My favorite target. But in Central Oregon they have become an almost-extinct species. So I haven't shot one around here in several years -- I'd hate to kill the last of the species.
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Nath
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by Nath »

How could you 🤣
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JimT
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

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Nath wrote: Sun Nov 13, 2022 1:57 pm How could you 🤣
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by Nath »

JimT wrote: Sun Nov 13, 2022 4:05 pm
Nath wrote: Sun Nov 13, 2022 1:57 pm How could you 🤣
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:lol:
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by Walt »

Years ago, not long after buying a 7 1/2" Freedom Arms in .454 a big jack hopped out into the arroyo where we had been shooting at gongs. He was about 25 yards away and I was surprised he had hung around at all but I shot him through the middle with a 300 gr cast bullet at about 1500 fps. He didn't react at all and I thought I had missed. He sat there for a few seconds, then hopped nonchalantly a few yards to the other side of a bush. A small dust cloud came up from where he kicked his last. He had a big hole through him; his heart and lungs were sprayed a ways up the ravine in the sand beyond where he had sat. I was shocked that he showed no immediate reaction to being hit.

I agree that jackrabbit numbers seem to be considerably less compared to several decades ago.
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by CowboyTutt »

Jim, in my new town in SoCal we have exotic meat markets where I can finally get some rabbit! Looking forward to that! -Tutt
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JimT
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

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CowboyTutt wrote: Tue Nov 15, 2022 8:19 pm Jim, in my new town in SoCal we have exotic meat markets where I can finally get some rabbit! Looking forward to that! -Tutt
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

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Nath wrote: Sun Nov 13, 2022 1:57 pm How could you 🤣
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To quote one of my favorite movies "It was easy".
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Re: Hunting the Lepus

Post by Blaine »

jeepnik wrote: Wed Nov 16, 2022 1:37 am
Nath wrote: Sun Nov 13, 2022 1:57 pm How could you 🤣
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To quote one of my favorite movies "It was easy".
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