Used to hunt on several hundred acres of land that was a mixture of fields and woods with a creek. Good deer and year round squirrel hunting on it. There was also one cottontail rabbit, that I and a hunting buddy that I shared the lease with, tried to shoot for a couple of years. It was always in an area of heavy ground cover and brush, and if you saw it, you only got one shot. It always saw us before we saw it and we had to shoot while it was running. I always hunted squirrel with a 22 lr semi-auto Marlin with a 3x8 power scope and my buddy used a combo 22 mag/410. Between the two of us, we missed hitting him about 7 times. So here are two stories about the bunny that would not die.
One day we are squirrel hunting along a cow path thru the woods, when my buddy shouts, he's coming your way. He had stumbled across the cottontail and it was running full speed directly towards me following the cow path I was on. Well a few seconds before, I had put my scope on 8 power to scan a tree for a squirrel. I could intermittently see the rabbit with my eyes as it ran along the cow path I was staddeling. Threw my 22 to my shoulder to aim with scope, only to see large blades of grass in lens. Oops, wrong power and the little sucker was about 10 feet away when I dropped my rifle and started firing from my hip. He was moving so fast, my bullets hit just behind him as he ran between my legs. I swiveled around at my waist to shoot again, without moving my feet, and fell on my butt.
Another time squirrel hunting I spotted the cottontail as it hopped into a large hollow log laying on ground. Don't think he had seen me and I positioned myself to watch both ends of hollow log that was about 12 foot long. When he came out, he was mine. I waited and waited, but no bunny appeared. Tired of waiting I crept over to log and slowly peered into it, but log too dark to see anything. Fired a shot into end of log, hoping it would run out of other end. It didn't. I kicked the log many times with my boot and still no bunny. Darn, it had slipped out of log and I had not seen it. How, did that happen, I asked myself as I sat on one end of log to have a smoke with my rifle cradled in my lap. Had just lit my pipe, when the little bunny that would not die, ran out of the log between my legs into the heavy nearby brush and disappeared. Crafty little sucker. He had waited until I had put my rifle down.