I prefer the .22 cal myself.
Here's one I developed for elephants
Yup, I'd recognize the .22 earsplitenlöudenboomer anywhere. We used that to kill squirrels in my part of the state. We just like em really really dead and partially cooked!
Grizzly/Moose keeps my suggestion at 30-06 or 300wm; seems a bit much for coues and javelina, though. Both have lots of off-the-shelf and reloading options. There's no shortage of big game animals being taken with smaller calibers over the last 100yrs, but just because something 'can' be done doesn't mean it 'should' be done. If you can handle the recoil, mitigating risk of wind, elevation, and shot placement isn't a bad thing. That especially goes for expensive guided hunts where one trigger pull is the cost of a F-150. For folks that live and hunt in places their whole life, I'm sure there is familiarity of methods, terrain, and shooting conditions that gives the confidence for lighter calibers.
Exactly how I feel, but he wrote it much more eloquently!
Yup, I'd recognize the .22 earsplitenlöudenboomer anywhere. We used that to kill squirrels in my part of the state. We just like em really really dead and partially cooked!
I have no clue what this is, but it ain't the loudenboomer.
My dad was personal friends with ole Ack so I'm very familiar with the cartridge.
That looks nothing like a. 378 unless it's photography magic.
Friend sent the pic to me awhile back, was just having a little fun
Either a 7mm Rem. Mag or a 30-06, even though I have never been a 30-06 fan, they really are great big game rifles, just not as flat of trajectory as a 7mm Rem. Mag.
Old or young its would be a great choice.. and like 308 ammo(great choice too)avai...everyplace...I Am recoil conscious and try to stay away from Belted stuff...I see it causes my accuracy to go downhill with ever shot after about 10 in a row at range Sissy I guess
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