Handguns TV On Location: Tejon Ranch

In the end it was a case of so close but yet so far.

by J. Scott Rupp

Handguns videographer Matt Young and executive producer J. Scott Rupp film a wild boar hunt at Tejon Ranch in southern California.

Two previous hunts for Handguns TV hadn’t produced a kill. During a March blizzard in Montana we tried to get coyotes inside 100 yards, but they were having none of it. In April in Texas we saw lots of wild hogs, but they never came out until it was too dark to film.

And so it was Thursday before Memorial Day that I found myself standing on a steep hillside overlooking California’s San Joaquin Valley, a herd of wild boars just out of sight. I was hunting Tejon Ranch, one of my favorite places in all the world, with guide Cody Plank. Cody and I had hunted together many times over the past decade, and our track record had always been good.

Now, with the sun sliding toward the horizon, we had to figure out how to get a look at what we believed were a few good hogs below us. The problem was a group of young sows and piglets rooting in the wild oats less than 30 yards away. Wild hogs don’t see very well, and they were partially hidden by the tall oats, but we were pinned down. Any attempt to move down the hill to get a look at the rest of the herd would surely spook them.

Finally they moved out of sight and we made a play. We eased out the hillside toward a small, oak-studded canyon and hadn’t gotten very far before Cody spotted a pair of hogs about 75 yards away, one of which was a decent dry sow. “You can take that one,” he said as I sat down and set up the shooting sticks. But before I could cock the hammer on the T/C Encore Pro Hunter in 6.5 Creedmoor, the downhill stick popped out. I quickly repositioned it but then had to reconfirm that I had the right animal—-which promptly slipped behind a tree before I could take the shot.

Then, right behind that pair, came a boar. It took Cody several seconds to identify it as a boar—-the vegetation and steep slope making it difficult to spot either tusks or testicles—and he gave me the green light. For just a second I had a shot at the rear quarter, a shot I wasn’t about to take, and then that hog too disappeared into the trees. It was over.

That’s the way hunting goes, especially handgun hunting. Had I been hunting with a rifle, at a distance of less than 100 yards I wouldn’t have bothered with sticks. I would’ve just shouldered the rifle and taken the shot—-and been totally confident of a lethal hit.

Rupp killed this hog at Tejon Ranch last year, shooting the same caliber, 6.5 Creedmoor, but in a Ruger M77 rifle. The shot was 85 yards offhand, simple enough with a rifle but too chancy with a handgun.

For that matter, we likely could’ve tagged out the first evening had I been shooting the 6.5 Creedmoor in a rifle instead of a 15-inch handgun. We spotted a lone boar on a hillside at 250 yards, and with a rifle I would’ve simply gotten steady and shot the hog. But instead we had to get closer, and by the time we crossed the canyon to get to the pig, it had either winded us or simply wandered off into the scrub oaks.

Am I disappointed? Sure. We really wanted to put together a great show on handgun hunting, and getting a kill on film, a successful conclusion, was certainly our goal. But hunting is hunting, as they say, and getting skunked is as much a part of the sport as coming home with a cooler full of meat.

But if anything, this past season reminded me of why I enjoy handgun hunting. I’d hunted hogs with a handgun twice before—-once with a Freedom Arms .41 Magnum single-action revolver and once with a T/C Encore in .30 TC—-and been successful. And what I remember most about those hunts is the stalk.

Handgun hunting is a real challenge because the shooting is more difficult and therefore you have to get closer.

As I mentioned, when you’re hunting with a rifle, often times it’s simply a matter of getting “close enough,” and most times the terrain and cover are going to allow you to get within 300 yards or so. But handgun hunting is more like muzzleloader hunting: You’ve got to close the distance to, for me, 100 yards. And that puts a premium on woodsmanship. You’ve got to plan your approach carefully, being ever mindful of the wind. You’ve got to be quiet. You’ve got to have a lot of patience. It really puts the “hunt” into hunting.

You can see the Tejon hunt unfold on the season finale of Handguns, which airs on Sportsman Channel Thursdays at 9:30 p.m., Fridays at 2 p.m., Sundays at 1:30 a.m. and Mondays at 11 a.m. (all times Eastern). For more, visit Sportsman Channel.

5 Responses

  1. Stevie D

    Tejon Ranch? Isn't that some type of salad dressing?

  2. Ken

    Horse pucky, I have an encore pistol, 15 inch barrel in 308 winchester and with a plus one inch sight in at 100 yards, it only drops three inches at 200 yards! I also have the 270 Winchester pistol barrel and 200 yards is a chip shot for that one! I had to try the 22-250 and Im not sure how far that one will shoot! Amazing groups at 200 yards!! Test your guns, see just what they are capable of at longer ranges. You haved the power!

  3. Elmer

    "As I mentioned, when you’re hunting with a rifle, often times it’s simply a matter of getting “close enough,” and most times the terrain and cover are going to allow you to get within 300 yards or so. But handgun hunting is more like muzzleloader hunting: You’ve got to close the distance to, for me, 100 yards."

    As you stated, close enough…. I shoot several T/C Contenders and Encores, 300 yards is not out of the normal for those who take the time to do the practice for that distance. I have seen rifle hunters due more harm to game being "close enough" and "pie plate" groups, then I have seen any handgun hunter. Any hunter with the desire to hunt with a handgun knows their limits, and yours seem to be 100 yards. You should let your readers and viewers know that it is your limit not the gun or caliber that you were hunting. If you are more interested in seeing just what handgun hunting can be, maybe you should check out specialtypistols.us. By the way, there are shooters there shooting 1000 yards shooting steel or targets and yes, with handguns.

  4. miles

    I loved this episode, handgun hunting. If anything I really just appreciated your honesty. You could have shot the critter with a rifle off camera and no one would have known. But instead of almost all hunting shows you just had no luck.

    Which shows your quite a true sportsman.

    I read the magazine and watch the show. I wonder if you will ever be given a little bit bigger budgets. But I love what I get.

  5. timbo1955

    Dont eat the boar, they poisoned the lake years ago and still shows signs of arsnic, big tejon " nobody knows, it will be okay", enjoy the hunt, after they build the 500 plus houses, there be no more hunting, just road and suv's