I haven't been predator hunting, on purpose, for many years.
Anyone here deliberately hunt coyotes with a muzzleloader? Specifically, anyone hunt then with shot in a smoothbore or a .32 caliber rifle?
Connecticut considers them "small" game, even though ours get pretty big. So, legally we are restricted to roundball no larger than .36 caliber or shot up to size #2.
Has anyone taken coyote with a muzzleloader that falls into these parameters?
Run your loads hot, and don't take shots that are farther than you could hit a coffee filter... you won't have any trouble with a .36. Watch him run, and mark immediately mark the spot where your feet were planted, a definite landmark where the coyote was standing, and, a landmark where you had your last sight of him running, and memorize the path he took before setting out after him. Then, get out and track him like a bowhunter. He is dead and down, and it depends on your own woodsmanship to find him...
For a little perspective, and this is relevant to the conversation, so bear with me: as a teenager, I killed a fox with a .177 air rifle at 1000 ft per sec and a hollowpoint pellet when i was 17 while squirrel hunting a semi populated area. At 20 yards, i got a full pass through, the hole was so small there was no bloodtrail, and not any blood on the fur. With a double lung hit. I watched him run 100 yds across a horse pasture and disappear. With compete concentration, i climbed a tree and assessed the layout and his path, reflected on it, and walked over to where i last saw him, and when i topped over the hill, there he lay...
The only reason i tried the shot though, was the week before, i had tested out the gun on the carcass of a trapped fox out of curiosity and was stunned to see pass throughs on the skinned carcass. A week later, opportunity presented itself and i was young... i definitely don't suggest it.
The point of the story is that you are not limited by a smaller caliber if you accomodate for it with sound woodsmanship and operate within your capabilities at all times... put yourself closer, and think, hunt, and track like a wise frontiersman, or a bowhunter.