Thanks but all the credit needs to go to Bill Leeper for building it!
All I do is shoot it!
Cat
Maybe so, but it doesn't hurt when it is posed on a buck.
Thanks but all the credit needs to go to Bill Leeper for building it!
All I do is shoot it!
Cat
Well, you have a point there!Maybe so, but it doesn't hurt when it is posed on a buck.
What is the caliber Cat?
Starting with you ??
No offense intended, but I always believed that the 30-40 Krag chambering would give a reloader tons more bullet options in that fine single shot rifle. (Can we say for instance, the very fine 170 grain Nosler Partition?)
ducking for cover now..........lol
I believe I was using factory ammo (possibly a remy core-lokt because my ex thought a lot of them) pushing a pedestrian 220 grain crimped cup' n core bullet dropped the bear I spoke of above.
The ot 6 doesn't have much power advantage on the 30-40 krag and an appropriate bullet with good placement would drop any grizzly.
You gotta get a guns butt plate against your own shoulder before you can properly assess it.
Lots of parroted anecdotal stuff floating around gun forums that is pure bs.
A stainless rossi 92/454 casull that is properly tuned and maintained combined with the appropriate ammo in the hands of a shooter who has bothered to learn to shoot it correctly is the best bear defence gun bar none that I've ever seen.
Tough, light, dependable, durable, fast pointing and lethal within 100 yards.
I hate to perpetuate the bear defence thing in this thread, because this thread was intended for nice easily handled guns in the bush (which as an ontarian I appreciate).....
There is a very big difference between shooting a bear you see breaking into something and fending off a charge.... Bears are easy to kill, yes.... But they don't die easy, especially full of adrenaline..... I have spent VERY limited time in grizz country and was never charged, but I did once have to give up a salmon while fishing....lol
The few grizz I have seen have either left me alone or ran the other way..... I do have plenty of blackie experience, and my biggest fear with them is what happens post trigger pull..... They get loopy.... They know something bad is up and they look to fix the situation with no understanding..... The sound of a death bawl is something that can haunt dreams..... That is the sound of an animal not being able to figure things out and accepting their fate.....
There is no doubt your calibers will kill a bear in a hunting situation, but bear have a standing heart rate that is very low, and they don't bleed out fast...... Lots can happen from a to b ......
Yup, I'm scared of bears.
My first husband and I lived in ketchikan and juneau alaska for several years.
I guess the 600+ pound young boar I shot at 60 yards with my mannlicher schoenaur 30-06 (another gun I sorely regret selling) while it was trying to dig into our grub cache in a hillside beside our cabin doesn't count.
Based on this post, you seem more than willing to shoot a bear that is not an imminent threat to your person...... You are in their territory, they arent in yours......
Based on this post, you seem more than willing to shoot a bear that is not an imminent threat to your person...... You are in their territory, they arent in yours......
and my reading of torontogungals post tells me that she is totally on the ball with the capabilities of a 20" barreled 454 Casull that holds 10 rounds in the tube = that can only come from experience.