Your Choice in Grouse Rifles?

Your choice in a Grouse Firearm?

  • .410 gauge

    Votes: 12 13.2%
  • 20 gauge

    Votes: 10 11.0%
  • 12 gauge

    Votes: 22 24.2%
  • .22 LR

    Votes: 37 40.7%
  • 30/30 Win

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • SKS (hehehe)

    Votes: 2 2.2%
  • Bow technology of some kind

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 8 8.8%

  • Total voters
    91
  • Poll closed .
I always pick the birds up on logging road from distance, sometimes even out to 100 yards. To me grouses are only the side order of my hunting trip and not always as dumb as most people say. So most time I'd use a centrefired rifle, it'll be good even if only 1/2 of good meat is left. My record was picking 5 birds within an hour on a logging road, so that road has to be really quiet and has little traffic. :)
 
My ruger 10/22 is my fav for grouse.


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10/22 with a butler creek "feather weight combo". 18" carbon fiber barrel and synthetic stock. Topped with a bushnell "Trophy" red dot. This set up has been running since 1999.
 
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For Ruffed I use my Ruger 10/22 until I figure I have missed enough, then it's the Remington .410 pump. The pump let's me make use of the skills honed banging all those rounds at the trap club. If I'm into Sharp tails, it's the Winchester 12G pump with trap loads, gives me a little more distance. As mentioned in a previous note, those grouse can startle ya pretty good so in my case, they are generally well on their way before I catch my breath and get a bead on em. Sharp Tails scare ya almost as much as the Blue's.

Speaking of trap loads and the 12G .... I put a couple of rounds in a Black Bear's arse today. He decided to visit my neighbours apple tree. I didn't realize unitl then but I guess she's out of town and so hasn't cleaned the tree and picked up the ones on the ground ... obviously why he was hanging around. Normally I wouldn't care but I have new neighbours on the one side of me with four kids, they are quite young and always riding their bikes around there. So I figured I better scare him off good. Yes, I cleaned up the apples so hopefully he will move on.

It was kinda humorous, I grabbed the neighbour (the dad of the four kids) and asked him to back me up with the 30.06 should Mr. Black take exception to my 12G motivational lesson. He was surprised with the size of the Bear and the fact that this was all going on in the front yard accross the street from his house at 2:30 in the afternoon. Any way, as mentioned, a couple rounds of trap loads sent him off in a hurry. Now the humorous part, after we were done I noticed the dad, his wife, and the kids out with the ladder, cleaning up all of the apples on their tree !! A smart move. I had mentioned to him last week that he should clean up his apples because I had seen a Bear near their place .... I guess he didn't believe then ....
 
22 LR for some challenge, 12 gauge if im being lazy that day :mrgreen:.

Also depends on what my hunting partner is taking.
 
22 all the way. I use a single shot 22 with a fixed 4 that I've had for 15 years. I have shot so many chicken heads every year that I wait till they are at least 75 yards away till I shoot. Ya.... most of the time the wind is going at least 45 kmh SSW and the sun is in my eyes binding me, But I still get them every time :)
 
Head shots only with rifles.
If I'm cruising 'roads' - .22 lr
When I'm walking it's usually with a centerfire, unless
I'm walking behind the brittanys, then it's a 12, 20 or .410 - really don't like pellets in my birds though (I'd shoot ducks and geese in the head with a .22 after they landed in the dekes if it were legal).

Last year all but 2 of my ruffies were shot with either a .308 or a 7x57 - that's what you get when big game season starts 2 days after upland...
only one Blue with a 7x57
Spruce were all with shotguns by legal neccesity.
Sharptails and Huns were all shotgun over dogs.
 
Sharptails?? Knock their heads off with my littte 222 Sako varmint. They have the habit of sitting up on bales with necks craned first thing in the morning! Ruffies?? I like my M12 16 gauge for that job.
 
Didn't the regs change for Alberta in the last little while?
I thought i read somewhere you can't use a single projectile for upland game birds anymore. Needs to be a shotgun.:confused:
 
WildCats said:
Didn't the regs change for Alberta in the last little while?
I thought i read somewhere you can't use a single projectile for upland game birds anymore. Needs to be a shotgun.:confused:

No change when I read the Regs. The single projectile thing applies to migratory birds. You can shoot upland with darn near anything.
 
In Manitoba here it's quite legal to shoot upland gamebirds with a single projectile. Just have to beware of local bylaws restricting rifle use. Shooting waterfowl with a single projectile has been illegal for all of my lifetime.
 
I've always loved a 20 gauge pumpm with an imp cyl choke. I've shot my share with that set up. I always use #6's too!

Dave.
 
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