7x57 with 139 grain Hornady Interlock bullets okay for black bear?

I know they can run. I've lost a bear shot with the 7.62 Russian and even one with a solid lung shot with the 300 Win. Mag. Blood trail and scuff marks for 100 yards into thick bush then nothing. No more lung shots on bears for me no matter what I shoot. Its shoulders or nothing.

This statement is one of the most ludicrous things that I have read on CGN! No more lung shots! Did it occur to you that since you did not recover the bear, that you may have missed the lungs? I hunted and guide for bears for 30+ years. All of my personal bears (40+)were taken with bows and pretty much every one was a lung shot. I requested that every sport who hunted with me target the lungs... And I tested their equipment on arrival in camp by shooting a life sized black bear silhouette, to ensure proper placement... Folks talk about shooting for shoulders to "anchor" the animal... Except for rare cases, like a ram or goat standing on a cliff or ledge, this is unnecessary and wasteful, as it is sure to destroy much of the meat, and make a mess of the carcass. I had one fella hit the front shoulder quartering on with a 7RM and 154's and all we were able to salvage was the cape and skull and a few roasts... The bullet fragmented and ploughed furrows EVERYWHERE! In short, you are less likely to loose a lung shot bear than any other shot you could make, with the exception of a CNS shot, which I feel are too risky. I will continue to train all new and young shooters that I mentor to target the lungs. This is the least risky shot, that gives the largest margin for error and cause the least damage to the carcass.
 
After hunting bears for 37 years, that's my choice hoytcannon.

I respect your opinion, but I'm sticking with mine and not going to argue with you nor resort to insulting language.
 
Well, I was involved with Bear "Control" many years ago, and shot many, many Black bears
that were a nuisance in fruit orchards.

Most were taken with the 30-06 and 165/180 Partitions.
Probably 15 with the 7x57 and the 140/150 Partition.
A couple with the 6mm Rem and the old style 100 Partition.

Individual bears were taken with several other chamberings. [303 Brit, 6.5x55, 264 Win Mag, 270 Win, 300 mag, etc]

The lung shot was always the preferred shot.
Never lost a bear shot solidly in the lungs.....they would run, but not far.
Shoot one a bit too far back though, and they would travel quite a way, and the blood trail was sparse in some cases.

I do not consider a Black Bear hard to kill, but the hair, fat and hide conspire to hide blood that might otherwise be visible.

Regards, Dave.
 
After hunting bears for 37 years, that's my choice hoytcannon.

I respect your opinion, but I'm sticking with mine and not going to argue with you nor resort to insulting language.

The language was not insulting to you... It was directed at the concept which you were presenting... That may be splitting hairs to you, but I believe that circulating info to "aim away from the lungs" flys in the face of everything that experienced hunters "know" to be true... Novice and/or young shooters should be counselled toward maximizing successful one shot kills... It is clear that I won't change your mind, which is fine for you, but I hope anyone reading your statement will also heed this counter viewpoint... I don't believe that your assertion would be supported by the majority of the hunting community... Particularly those with considerable experience.
 
I use a 117 gr interlock in 2506 but I avoid the shoulders.

Me too! 243 with 95 grain NP as well. Also 7mm RM, 338 win mag, 7mm-08, 12 gauge and archery tackle. Lost track of how many, but lots! Never felt the need for a .375, even the .338 seemed a bit much.
 
P.S - The 139's will do very well for bears... I load the 139 IL's in my 7mm-08's and the 154's in my 7X57's, for all intents and purposes, to equal effect.

I've recently begun loading the 139 GMX in both calibers... but have yet to shoot an animal with them... I would prefer some experience before I flap my trap on their potential.
 
I too always go for the lung shot except for one that was walking head on to me and wouldn't turn to I took him in the head. He dropped in his tracks. The only time I have recovered a bullet from a black bear. It was a 180gr Hornady Interlock boat tail. It went through the skull and piled up under the skin in his shoulder. Perfect mushroom. All the rest have gone completely through the chest and exited sometimes taking out the leg on the other side. None went far as stated before. But all were bled well and the meat was excellent. I too prefer the heart/lung shot over any other and as Hoytcanon has stated encourage others especially new hunters to do the same. But just my opinion, others can ultimately do as they will.
 
My current favourite rifle is my lightweight 1955 Husqvarna 7x57. My most accurate handloads are with 139 grain Hornady bullet. Now I have already killed one medium size black bear with this combination but it did run a ways (40 yards) despite being drilled through both shoulders.

Since 1976 I have shot bears with a 243, 7.62 Russian, 30-06 and 300 Winchester magnum, but like I said, I like my 7x57 best to carry around.

I have a Husqvarna 270 too that is perhaps my most accurate rifle. I load 150 grain Hornady Interlocks into that. The 300 has probably killed more bears than the others, but it's getting a bit heavy for this 60 year old guy to pack around.

So what do you think? Would you be confident with that 7x57 as described or would you pick one of the others?

You describe your confidence in the rifle and in its accuracy and that's certainly enough to put the odds in your favour. A bear can cover the 40 yards you described in about 0.2 seconds, so it sounds like he died in a hurry. IMO you're just fine.
 
I have a friend who is a guide for black bear hunt. His advice is get the biggest gun you can shoulder. He had to chase down wounded bear too many time because his client use medium caliber and poor shots. Some show up with a 30-30 and most just wound the bear and pi$$ them off. My guide friend does not like to track and face wounded bears so he carries a 375 Holland and Holland. I would use the 300WM if I was hunting by myself. There is no guarantee every shot you take will kill the bear outright unless it is a 375 H&H .

This response is silly. It's about poor shot placement, not the cartridge.
 
A lost bear, or any other animal for that matter, 'hit in the lungs' whether with a 30/30 or 7x57 or 300 Mag... Was not hit in the lungs as claimed.
 
That's BS any animal can be lost, even with a perfect hit. In fact its the guys that think their animal will always be 50yards away laying dead in the wide open that are most susceptible to calling it a clean miss and walking away. Even when everything goes right things can still go wrong.
 
True. Dead does not equal found. I guess I was more speaking to the fact that any lung or heart hit animal is dead on its feet. Sometimes they do take a while to realize it, for sure. I've followed hard hit bears into dark thickets, they don't usually run to wide open spaces to die... IME.

To claim a lung shot is a poor, low percentage shot, as an earlier poster did, is bad advice. IMO.
 
My current favourite rifle is my lightweight 1955 Husqvarna 7x57. My most accurate handloads are with 139 grain Hornady bullet. Now I have already killed one medium size black bear with this combination but it did run a ways (40 yards) despite being drilled through both shoulders.

Since 1976 I have shot bears with a 243, 7.62 Russian, 30-06 and 300 Winchester magnum, but like I said, I like my 7x57 best to carry around.

I have a Husqvarna 270 too that is perhaps my most accurate rifle. I load 150 grain Hornady Interlocks into that. The 300 has probably killed more bears than the others, but it's getting a bit heavy for this 60 year old guy to pack around.

So what do you think? Would you be confident with that 7x57 as described or would you pick one of the others?

I hunt them with a 6.5x55 with 156 gr Norma Oryx. Works great, all pass through and short recovery. If I had a 7x57, I would shoot the same bullet. Good Luck
 
imo id use 175gr rn...this cartridge was legendary in africa using the bullet....
Good choice but this bullet may not stabilize in a Husqvarna given the slow twist bbl. Well worth a try, but these bullets are getting hard to find as Hornady stopped making them. I was lucky to get 400pcs Hornady 154gr RNs last year for my 7x57R.

Those 154gr RN would be a VG choice as well. I use them for really BIG game as shown below. ;)

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If that is the only critter in your possession, I think you need a 50 objective and lots of umph on the other end too.
Just an observation.
 
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