Why is nobody mentioning the 12ga??
Far superior for small game with shot ... and with the right slug it can kill any animal on the North American continent!
You say cartridge but it always comes down to bullets.
I would take a 6.5X55 or 260 or (gasp) 6.5 Creedmoor with one of today’s super bullets over any 30–06 load that was available 100 years ago.
Why is nobody mentioning the 12ga??
Far superior for small game with shot ... and with the right slug it can kill any animal on the North American continent!
something that is light on recoil but reliable enough to take down any game in North America.
you want something big for Polar Bear or Alaska Grizz / Kodiak n Moose...but being light on recoil throws a wrench.
Why is nobody mentioning the 12ga??
Far superior for small game with shot ... and with the right slug it can kill any animal on the North American continent!
Any WWII main battle rifle cartridge would do the trick.
RJProbably a subject where someone who’s done the North America 29 or at least most of them would be the person to ask, rather than asking anyone to prevent answers without the depth of experience like .375 Win. I’ve met a couple in the course of work, and they’re by and large .300 guys. If I was doing it, I’d choose a 7 Mag but that’s just personal preference.
You have to choose the tool by the most demanding task for it. That is long range and mountains, I’d much sooner make a 400 yard mountain goat shot with a 7 Mag than a .375 Win.
Beats getting into trouble ...Winter boredom. Just like last winter, and umpteen before that.




























