Small Game and More: Late-Late Season Hunts

by
posted on February 7, 2018
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
late-lateseason_lead.jpg

The big game seasons may be done, but that doesn’t mean we have to shut down our 2017-18 hunting. Between now and when spring gobblers officially call in a new hunting year, most states still have opportunities on the books, maybe more than you thought.

My attention turns primarily to small game like rabbits and squirrels, two critters that originally hooked me on outdoor pursuit and eating wild meat. I like the exercise and of course just being in the woods, but I also get all caught up in the method, which varies between the two. With squirrels I sneak along or sit tight in order to earn clean shots with a .22, rifle or pistol. I take the brush-crashing approach to rabbit hunting and normally rely on the shotgun to stop their runs. Mostly I focus on one or the other, but you can easily combine the two.

The end game is the meat. If you have a great day—and success rates are high—it means a truly fresh meal, an entrée that’s never been in a freezer. For the record, I love rabbit and like squirrel. The classic approach is to pan-fry both (gravy and biscuits with squirrel), but the real trick is not to overcook so that the lean, fat-free meat dries out. My favorites involve braising rabbit in a mustard sauce, and slow-cooking squirrels until the flesh tenderizes, then using it in dishes like Brunswick stew or tacos.

A close second appeal nowadays is shooting my small-game guns, which include a couple of .22 rifles, a 20-gauge Remington 1100, and a vintage Savage 24 combo gun, .410 smoothbore over .22 LR. This year I’ve added a Smith & Wesson Model 617, a .22 revolver with a 6-1/2” bull barrel and a 10-shot cylinder. This gem is all machined steel (stainless, in fact), and literally runs like clockwork.  With a Crimson Trace Lasergrip as my principle sight, it can hold a 2” group at 25 yards—or as we like to say, minute of squirrel.

Squirrels and rabbits aren’t the only dishes on the late-late-season menu. In some states serious wingshooters get their winter workouts from grouse, light geese or resident Canadas and crows. Coyote callers and hog hunters remain in business where those destructive animals persist. The point is—as Winston Churchill famously said in regard to a graver matter—“never, never, never surrender.”

I write this from squirrel camp as a guest of Visit Mississippi and Crimson Trace. Over the course of 60 years of hunting camps, this is the first one devoted to chasing the tree rats. We’re fully engaged. The talk has circled from .22 LR ballistics to the squirrels’ ability to see color (red vs. green), to nest shooting (not our thing), to the effects of falling barometric pressure on daylight bushytail activity. Serious business, except that its really not. It’s just for fun, fun that’s not always present in hunts elsewhere. Perhaps squirrel and rabbit camps ought to be the next big thing in hunting.

Latest

Ledeservice Awards More Than
Ledeservice Awards More Than

More Than $6.6 Million in Tribal Wildlife Grants to Advance Conservation

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) is awarding more than $6.6 million to federally recognized Native American and Alaska Native tribes to benefit fish and wildlife resources and their habitats. This year’s funding will support 35 tribes for conservation projects across 15 states, benefiting a wide range of wildlife and habitat, including species of cultural or traditional importance to Indigenous communities.

Hardware Review: TriStar KR.22

TriStar is noted for shotguns, but Bryce Towsley recently received a test gun from them that’s much different. Check out his review on the TriStar KR.22.

New for 2026: Browning Trail Cameras' Security Tree Strap

Browning Trail Cameras has released a Security Tree Strap, a durable and dependable mounting solution to keep trail cameras in place in nearly any environment.

Proof Research Introduces PXT Rifle Barrel Technology

Proof Research has launched Proof Exponential Twist (PXT), an advancement in rifling that promises to improve durability, accuracy and shootability. Further, Proof has backed this new technology with extensive military testing and research. Engineered to meet the demands of modern high-pressure ammunition, PXT is billed as delivering longer barrel life, improved consistency and enhanced performance.  

Ammo Analysis: So You Like 'em Heavy?

Phil Massaro discusses what might make someone opt for a heavy-for-caliber choice when taking on game.

New for 2026: Steiner eDiscovery 10x42 Binoculars with Integrated Camera

Steiner Optics has introduced the eDiscovery 10x42 binoculars, combining clarity and durability with a fully integrated 4K camera.

Interests



Get the best of American Hunter delivered to your inbox.