Zepp's Swamp Rabbit Screamer

$29.95

You're going to love the Zepp's Swamp Rabbit Screamer.  It's CNC machined out of diamond wood, is loud, has a great sound and a long lasting reed which won't freeze up on you in cold temperatures.  It gives you the long lasting life of an open reed call in a closed reed call, something no one else has done for you until now.

Predators move, feed, defend their territory at all times of the day but peek hours tend to be early in the morning and late in the afternoon, especially in the mid-west. In sparsely populated states or parts of the country where there are less people,  predators will move throughout the day more freely than they do in mid-western states where peek movement hours find coyotes and fox roaming more freely during the night as well as the first and last light hours.

When making a stand, generally, I like to blow on a call for one or two minutes and then sit for three or four minutes in silence paying attention for any movement and then repeating this sequence for fifteen minutes for coyotes, twenty minutes for fox and maybe thirty or forty five minutes in good bobcat or mountain lion country.  Blow a series of waaaahhh, waaahhh, waaahhh into the call to make an emotional distress sound. Obviously the time of year, the time of day and weather conditions can shorten or lengthen the time I spend on a stand.

You're going to love the Zepp's Swamp Rabbit Screamer.  It's CNC machined out of diamond wood, is loud, has a great sound and a long lasting reed which won't freeze up on you in cold temperatures.  It gives you the long lasting life of an open reed call in a closed reed call, something no one else has done for you until now.

Predators move, feed, defend their territory at all times of the day but peek hours tend to be early in the morning and late in the afternoon, especially in the mid-west. In sparsely populated states or parts of the country where there are less people,  predators will move throughout the day more freely than they do in mid-western states where peek movement hours find coyotes and fox roaming more freely during the night as well as the first and last light hours.

When making a stand, generally, I like to blow on a call for one or two minutes and then sit for three or four minutes in silence paying attention for any movement and then repeating this sequence for fifteen minutes for coyotes, twenty minutes for fox and maybe thirty or forty five minutes in good bobcat or mountain lion country.  Blow a series of waaaahhh, waaahhh, waaahhh into the call to make an emotional distress sound. Obviously the time of year, the time of day and weather conditions can shorten or lengthen the time I spend on a stand.