Top 5 Backyard Squirrel Hunting Tips with the EDgun Leshiy and ATN X Sight 4K

If you're a frequent reader of the EDgun Leshiy site, or follow along on YouTube or Instagram, you're well aware of the over population of squirrels within my yard. While not a pest species, when the population explodes, they can cause quite a bit of damage looking for food and shelter. It's a trickle down effect from there... holes in trash cans bring mice, rats... rats bring raccoons, opossums, etc.

I've learned quite a bit about squirrel hunting / pest control with an airgun, in this case the EDgun Leshiy. I decided to make a Top 5 squirrel hunting tips video, as what I thought was obvious in retrospect... might not be to everyone, as some of these were new to me, and learned through experience.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jErRj4wpSC0&t=20s



Squirrel Hunting Tip #5: Use Bait

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The use of bait, especially for backyard airgun hunting (ideally with the EDgun Leshiy ;)) slows these guys down. They are constantly moving around, and with a small kill-zone, the slightest movement can be the difference between a clean ethical kill and a runner.

Squirrel Hunting Tip #4: Best Caliber

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This one shouldn't come as a surprise, but just in case you're on the fence (get it? what the video...) about the right airgun caliber for shooting squirrels, this one is for you. The EDgun Leshiy in .25 is just a devastating pellet. The concussion alone is enough to kill a squirrel. It gives flexibility not for an intentionally poor shot, but one that might drift a bit for whatever reason.

Squirrel Hunting Tip #3: Tune your Airgun Down

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This tip was one I gathered through lots of trial and error. Early on, I grossly underestimated the power a modern day airgun. These ARE NOT toys! I did what everyone else did... watch youtube and tuned my EDgun Leshiy (and others) to 30-40 ft/lbs. While it's certainly effective, I was still getting some runners every once and awhile. Naturally I turned it up, but quickly came back down based on the added noise. Being ultra quiet is what first got me into the low power tune. I would read about all the UK folks and they would kill tons of stuff, squirrels included at sub 12ft/lbs. What was different for me was I wanted to use the EDgun Leshiy in the .25 caliber. What I ultimately found was that a larger percentage of the available power was being dumped into the squirrel vs a high power tune.

I go into a lot of detail here the process I took to tuning the .25 into a low power machine: https://www.edgunleshiy.com/blog/2018/9/11/revisiting-backyard-friendly-airgun-tuning/

Squirrel Hunting Tip #2: Safe Backdrop

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This tip kind of goes hand in hand with #3. I always assume the pellet is going to pass-through, even in a low power tune! It's super important we as airgunners by into this. Backyard airgun shooting is a privilege... don't be that guy that's resting on it being your right. Be safe, show patience when needed, and you'll be rewarded.

Squirrel Hunting Tip #1: Shot Placement

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Shot placement is my #1 Tip. This tip is within the context of the EDgun Leshiy in .25, and a low power tune. A shot into the vitals is certainly an ethical way of taking a squirrel, so I'm not saying that. I just find it requires a little more punch to get through the shoulder/ribs.

The first ideal shot is between the ear and eyes... where you want to miss closer to the ear then the eye. Even a shot right through the ears depending on the angle will be instant. A shot through the eyes will work, but often leads to a little jumping if it drifts towards the nose. This is exactly why the .25 though is perfect... if you get a little drift, the concussion alone is enough to drop it.

When a squirrel is looking right at you, another great option (with the .25) is between the eyes. This is a pretty wide target, as the pellet will travel through the full brain, and out the neck... shutting down the nervous system instantly. This shot, if just above the nose between the eyes, also usually has limited or no pass-through. Again, always assume it will, but in the context of dumping maximum energy into the squirrel... this shot placement will accomplish that.

​That's my top 5! Did I miss one? Comment below, or within the video and let me know.

Happy shooting,

Tim

Full article here: https://www.edgunleshiy.com/blog/2018/10/22/top-5-backyard-squirrel-hunting-tips-with-the-edgun-leshiy-and-atn-x-sight-4k-pro/
 
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Great tip, thanks for writing them down.

What is this low power of which you speak? 12, 20, 30? Your saying that the lower power setting dump more energy into the animal instead of wasted in passing right though?

Smitty

I have the Leshiy shooting 26gr polymags at 520fps , so about 15ft/lbs. the 25gr Kings @ 540FPS.



yes, that’s what I’m saying... larger % of energy being dumped into squirrel at 15ft/lbs vs 30, 60, etc. deminishing returns from my experience anything above 15-17.

Cheers


 
This is always been a pet peeve of mine calling backyard pesting hunting. Your video has great tips for backyard squirrel shooting/pesting because of the environment and safety concerns. Actually hunting out in the woods for wild squirrels is a totally different situation. The wild squirrel will be foraging and moving around constantly and if they see you they will not stay around long. The shots will not always be at one distance with the yardages about the same with the squirrel feeding on bait pile. In the woods your shots will be at all different distances and angles with branches in the way. Out in the woods you will benefit from higher fpe output to allow for flatter shooting trajectory and killing power at distance. I remember the first time I went prairie dog shooting and called it prairie dog hunting. My host said its not prairie dog hunting its shooting. In the backyard environment the suburban squirrel comes to you and used to having people around. The wild squirrel is very wary of people and requires much stealth on the hunters part to get within range to get off a shot. I'm sure you and most people know these things. That's why I wish most backyard shooters would call what they do pesting. I'm not downing what you do just that you call it hunting. Hopefully no offense taken. Bill
 
This is always been a pet peeve of mine calling backyard pesting hunting. Your video has great tips for backyard squirrel shooting/pesting because of the environment and safety concerns. Actually hunting out in the woods for wild squirrels is a totally different situation. The wild squirrel will be foraging and moving around constantly and if they see you they will not stay around long. The shots will not always be at one distance with the yardages about the same with the squirrel feeding on bait pile. In the woods your shots will be at all different distances and angles with branches in the way. Out in the woods you will benefit from higher fpe output to allow for flatter shooting trajectory and killing power at distance. I remember the first time I went prairie dog shooting and called it prairie dog hunting. My host said its not prairie dog hunting its shooting. In the backyard environment the suburban squirrel comes to you and used to having people around. The wild squirrel is very wary of people and requires much stealth on the hunters part to get within range to get off a shot. I'm sure you and most people know these things. That's why I wish most backyard shooters would call what they do pesting. I'm not downing what you do just that you call it hunting. Hopefully no offense taken. Bill

It's titled... "Top 5 Backyard Squirrel Hunting Tips with the EDgun Leshiy and ATN X Sight 4K". I get what you're saying, but splitting hairs if you ask me on wording. They are a pest though, so I'll roll with that ;). cheers
 
Nice tips bud! I'm really taking a liking to this scopes performance. My through the scope method is getting old and I've never been really happy with my Side-Shot and Iphone setups. How's the quality in low light (early morning/evening) at say 30 yards?

I think it deals with it really well. Sometimes in those conditions it doesn't track pellets very well, but as far as seeing the animal... zero issues. At some point there's that line between pest control and filming a movie though ;)

If you have a lot of variable distances over 50 yards, the small reticle options might create a challenge. While we wait on airgun friendly reticles and chair data integration for pellet BC's, I think using the profile feature for setting up different distances is a great workaround. I bet changing to a different profile is probably 1/2 the time you'd spend messing around with getting camera in focus, etc.

One of the biggest things I like is it allows you to shoulder a gun normally. You're not sitting behind it, looking at a camera. I know the sideshot does this, but you still have to deal with your phone, or camera... plus it's a lot of extra stuff on the scope.

Cheers