I'm only in the infancy of planning a lion hunt. If my 9.3x74R is accepted in the country/province /state, then I will save about $15,000 on a new sxs double rifle. I've reloaded 250 grain Nosler Accubonds with it and it's very accurate at 100 yards, bullets overlapping each-other. I killed one bull moose with it so-far.If I would be buying a double for an African hunt it would be rimmed cartridge the 375 flemged nitro express!!
Man that would cool!!
Good luck and if you end up buying a new gun please share cause I like to see your guns!!
Gooder ✔ (20" brl, stainless, good hunting action) and especially fur the price! 416 Rem would be a tad step up ...Or if you prefer a 375 Ruger, here is another beauty!
With a reasonable price. Cost on this rifle is close to the current retail.
https://www.dominionoutdoors.ca/savage-110-brush-hunter-375-ruger-20-barrel.html
The Savage Stainless Brush Hunter is now sold!.........![]()
Wow!I'm only in the infancy of planning a lion hunt. If my 9.3x74R is accepted in the country/province /state, then I will save about $15,000 on a new sxs double rifle. I've reloaded 250 grain Nosler Accubonds with it and it's very accurate at 100 yards, bullets overlapping each-other. I killed one bull moose with it so-far.
Great information from people already, thanks!
Just not with turn of the last century 140gr soft points allegedly. Ha ha.280 Ross
Africa Hunting forum, my favourite source of answers for such questions
Which country in Africa? It makes a difference. - danIf it's the 375 H&H, then I must go shopping for another double rifle; none for sale in Canada from my internet search. Funny, I ask myself, if a minimum of 375 H&H is required, how-come bows and arrows are allowed?
Good choice, lol. - dan280 Ross
Well, yeah...doesn't everybody do it that way? I know that's how I did it...I thought the proper way to take a lion was a harried horseback pursuit until Simba is ready to charge whence you dismount and shoot him with your light sporting rigby.
Certainly that would be the case for traditional solids and mono's...if there is such a thing as a "traditional" mono...but a "modern" mono like one of the descendants of the Barnes X-bullet family is designed to function as the ultimate soft-point expanding bullet, is it not? Penetration and expansion all in one package. Perfect lion medicine, no?No PH is going to recommend mono's or solids for lions... premium softs are the way to go.
Certainly that would be the case for traditional solids and mono's...if there is such a thing as a "traditional" mono...but a "modern" mono like one of the descendants of the Barnes X-bullet family is designed to function as the ultimate soft-point expanding bullet, is it not? Penetration and expansion all in one package. Perfect lion medicine, no?
Please feel free to flame me if I am wrong; I'll just claim somebody else said it...![]()
That makes sense, thanks! Fragmentation/shrapnel isn't something I normally think of or strive for; I grew up reading all about weight retention and how the Nosler Partition was the then-ultimate due to its fancy-shmancy new-age design.That may be true, particularly with the LRX type, designed to expand at lower velocity... however what they don't do is come apart, and nothing is more devastating on a soft animal (cats), than internal shrapnel. There are the new breed of "break-away" solids, but I have no experience with them, some swear by them, some swear at them, I have no opinion on them.
I had lengthy campfire discussions on the subject with a group of PH's, but it was specific to leopards, although they did say it applied to lions aswell... they all liked classic cup & core softs, and/or partitioned softs for cats.
Decide where you are going. No flys on your 9.3x74 for lion, just is it legal where you want to go? Talk to your outfitter. Writers like Jim Carmichael have killed lions with 338WM and have opined that with the right bullet, the 338WM is about a perfect lion cartridge. It's just not legal in some areas.Does anyone know what the legal minimal cartridge to hunt lions in Aftrica? I have a Merkel 9.3x74R SXS double rifle.
Thanks!
While it's true that .375 H&H is frequently the legally stipulated minimum for lion, I've yet to meet a PH who felt that made a lot of sense. Cats of all sizes are made the same way -- they're designed to dish out damage, but they're not really made to take it. Moreover, their highly attuned nervous system does seem to make them more susceptible to system shock than many similar sized animals. At least, that's been a notable observation in my own experience having shot lynx, cougar, caracal, leopard, lioness and lion.
That makes sense, thanks! Fragmentation/shrapnel isn't something I normally think of or strive for; I grew up reading all about weight retention and how the Nosler Partition was the then-ultimate due to its fancy-shmancy new-age design.
I've never been a bullet nerd. I'll always feel comfortable with an old-fashioned bullet that starts out at .45-cal...as opposed to a more modern design that expands to .45-cal from smaller diameters. The new whiz-kids all know their bullets' weight, ogive profile, BC, SD, ideal expansion velocity range, inches of penetration in ballistic gel, the names of the designers kids and their favourite colours, etc. Hell, I wouldn't wear a Berger cap if you gave it to me for free!
I just like to shoot.![]()