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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6106639
12/28/15 11:11 PM
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Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968
dogdown23
Tracker
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Tracker
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968 |
Dogdown
The only thing that'll stop a bad man with a gun, is a good man with a gun.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6106645
12/28/15 11:13 PM
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Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 6,299
Tactical Cowboy
THF Trophy Hunter
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THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 6,299 |
Anything up to deer, with discretion.
The secret to a long life is to try not to shorten it.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: dogdown23]
#6106656
12/28/15 11:18 PM
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Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,950
HuntnFly67
THF Trophy Hunter
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THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,950 |
I use a 50 cal for all my deer. After the shot I don't have to quarter them. Already in pieces and ready to bag. I think a .50 might be over gunning. Spitfires and Hurricanes had .303 caliber guns in their wings during WW2 to shoot other airplanes out of the sky. You'd think that any .30 cal cartridge would carry enough oompf to put some venison on the ground.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6106696
12/28/15 11:36 PM
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Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968
dogdown23
Tracker
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Tracker
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968 |
Sir on this forum there's no such thing as over gunning or undergunning. And EVERYONE knows EVERYTHING about EVERYTHING.
Dogdown
The only thing that'll stop a bad man with a gun, is a good man with a gun.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6106706
12/28/15 11:42 PM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 21,271
SniperRAB
THF Celebrity
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THF Celebrity
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 21,271 |
BUT are you aware the Military uses FMJ
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6106710
12/28/15 11:43 PM
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Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968
dogdown23
Tracker
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Tracker
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968 |
I believe I read that somewhere?
Dogdown
The only thing that'll stop a bad man with a gun, is a good man with a gun.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Nogalus Prairie]
#6107219
12/29/15 03:05 AM
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Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 60,296
stxranchman
Obie Juan Kenobi
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Obie Juan Kenobi
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 60,296 |
Just surprised to hear you advocate that intentionally aiming for the shoulder blade on a deer with a small frangible bullet is ideal shot placement. That's all. I have always told people to shoot the caliber you are most comfortable with and shoot the shot they are capable of making. That confidence will show in their shooting ability. When they ask me about placement I always ask if they can hit the hi-point of the shoulder shot. If they have never shot that shot, then I ask them to take the shot they are most comfortable with. After I watch them shoot at the range, I then base how close I need to get them a shot on a hunt. No matter what rifle I am shooting be it my .223, 6mm, .270 or .280 I will always take the hi-point of the shoulder shot. I know where to hit the deer at that shot placement and what the shot does to deer with all the calibers I listed. The bullet I choose for each will allow me to make that shot. For each caliber I have limits on range and placement of the shot. If I cannot place it where I want then I wait till I can my prefered shot or get closer. I am and have never have been a long range shooter. I know my limits. If I am in a blind my range is a bit better than if I shoot off of sticks. My shot placement will still be the same though how ever I am hunting. I have witnessed to many over-calibered shooters make poor shot choices because in their mind they had enough gun/bullet combo to make the shot. That's all well, good, and understandable - except it doesn't change the fact that intentionally shooting a fast, soft, small 55 grain .223 bullet into bone is not a good idea. Every other caliber you mention is an almost 2x to 3x heavier bullet. If your intent is to aim for and break through bone - use a bone-breaking bullet, not a softpoint. Oh, and the military uses FMJs in .223 for those who think that's even relevant to anything..... I take it you have never shot a hi-shoulder shot.
Are idiots multiplying faster than normal people?
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: stxranchman]
#6107328
12/29/15 03:55 AM
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Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 42,323
J.G.
THF Celebrity
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THF Celebrity
Joined: Dec 2008
Posts: 42,323 |
800 Yard Steel Range Precision Rifle Instruction Memberships and Classes Available
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6107353
12/29/15 04:08 AM
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Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968
dogdown23
Tracker
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Tracker
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968 |
FiremanJG, I put that scope on a DPMS 223 and turned it into a varmint killing machine. Think I'll try it on an elephant next? What do you think. With perfect shot placement it should kill one right?
Dogdown
The only thing that'll stop a bad man with a gun, is a good man with a gun.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6107363
12/29/15 04:13 AM
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Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968
dogdown23
Tracker
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Tracker
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968 |
There may be more sufficient calibers than the 223 that will make a more ethical kill shot, but hey I have a 223 so why not use it to shoot an animal much larger than that caliber is made for.
Dogdown
The only thing that'll stop a bad man with a gun, is a good man with a gun.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6107393
12/29/15 04:28 AM
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Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 9,760
Mickey Moose
THF Trophy Hunter
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THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 9,760 |
What would you all hunt for w a 223? Black Panthers.
My botnet is bigger than yours.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6107407
12/29/15 04:33 AM
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Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968
dogdown23
Tracker
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Tracker
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968 |
Dogdown
The only thing that'll stop a bad man with a gun, is a good man with a gun.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: HuntnFly67]
#6107881
12/29/15 04:14 PM
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Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 11,561
Choctaw
THF Celebrity
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THF Celebrity
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 11,561 |
I use a 50 cal for all my deer. After the shot I don't have to quarter them. Already in pieces and ready to bag. I think a .50 might be over gunning. Spitfires and Hurricanes had .303 caliber guns in their wings during WW2 to shoot other airplanes out of the sky. You'd think that any .30 cal cartridge would carry enough oompf to put some venison on the ground. Yeah, but those were flown mainly by Brits. A .50 cal would take care of all of my hunting needs from rabbits to Messerschmitts.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Choctaw]
#6107916
12/29/15 04:31 PM
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Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,950
HuntnFly67
THF Trophy Hunter
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THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,950 |
I use a 50 cal for all my deer. After the shot I don't have to quarter them. Already in pieces and ready to bag. I think a .50 might be over gunning. Spitfires and Hurricanes had .303 caliber guns in their wings during WW2 to shoot other airplanes out of the sky. You'd think that any .30 cal cartridge would carry enough oompf to put some venison on the ground. Yeah, but those were flown mainly by Brits. A .50 cal would take care of all of my hunting needs from rabbits to Messerschmitts. Good point. The Ma Deuce - the ultimate all purpose firearm.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: HuntnFly67]
#6107937
12/29/15 04:46 PM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 21,271
SniperRAB
THF Celebrity
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THF Celebrity
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 21,271 |
I use a 50 cal for all my deer. After the shot I don't have to quarter them. Already in pieces and ready to bag. I think a .50 might be over gunning. Spitfires and Hurricanes had .303 caliber guns in their wings during WW2 to shoot other airplanes out of the sky. You'd think that any .30 cal cartridge would carry enough oompf to put some venison on the ground. Yeah, but those were flown mainly by Brits. A .50 cal would take care of all of my hunting needs from rabbits to Messerschmitts. Good point. The Ma Deuce - the ultimate all purpose firearm. Great Ranch Weapon...
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: SniperRAB]
#6108090
12/29/15 06:34 PM
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Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 3,129
kdkane1971
Veteran Tracker
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Veteran Tracker
Joined: Jan 2014
Posts: 3,129 |
Great Ranch Weapon...
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: kdkane1971]
#6108267
12/29/15 08:39 PM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 21,271
SniperRAB
THF Celebrity
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THF Celebrity
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 21,271 |
Great Ranch Weapon... Thats AWESOME
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6108959
12/30/15 03:25 AM
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Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 94
Ackley_improved
Outdoorsman
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Outdoorsman
Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 94 |
So many people on this forum think that the headstamp matters more than shot placement and bullet, and I'll never understand that. The fact remains that the .223 is sufficient for anything that you can legally hunt in Texas, and shot placement remains king regardless of caliber...with bullet design being a close second.
To be certain, my perfect hunting rifle is a 223 or 223ai stoked with a 62 TSX at 2950 or 3150, respectively. It'll smoke anything available, with authority, and with no second guesses.
Next thing you know, you'll be hearing old timer's and "guides" complain about hunting with a gas gun...specifically ar-15's.
Last edited by Ackley_improved; 12/30/15 03:26 AM.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: stxranchman]
#6109059
12/30/15 04:25 AM
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Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 2,449
Auctioneer1
Veteran Tracker
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Veteran Tracker
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 2,449 |
Just surprised to hear you advocate that intentionally aiming for the shoulder blade on a deer with a small frangible bullet is ideal shot placement. That's all. I have always told people to shoot the caliber you are most comfortable with and shoot the shot they are capable of making. That confidence will show in their shooting ability. When they ask me about placement I always ask if they can hit the hi-point of the shoulder shot. If they have never shot that shot, then I ask them to take the shot they are most comfortable with. After I watch them shoot at the range, I then base how close I need to get them a shot on a hunt. No matter what rifle I am shooting be it my .223, 6mm, .270 or .280 I will always take the hi-point of the shoulder shot. I know where to hit the deer at that shot placement and what the shot does to deer with all the calibers I listed. The bullet I choose for each will allow me to make that shot. For each caliber I have limits on range and placement of the shot. If I cannot place it where I want then I wait till I can my prefered shot or get closer. I am and have never have been a long range shooter. I know my limits. If I am in a blind my range is a bit better than if I shoot off of sticks. My shot placement will still be the same though how ever I am hunting. I have witnessed to many over-calibered shooters make poor shot choices because in their mind they had enough gun/bullet combo to make the shot. That's all well, good, and understandable - except it doesn't change the fact that intentionally shooting a fast, soft, small 55 grain .223 bullet into bone is not a good idea. Every other caliber you mention is an almost 2x to 3x heavier bullet. If your intent is to aim for and break through bone - use a bone-breaking bullet, not a softpoint. Oh, and the military uses FMJs in .223 for those who think that's even relevant to anything..... I take it you have never shot a hi-shoulder shot. You have to remember some may not know where that location is on a deer. Some may think it's a high shoulder but instead it's right dead center just my 2 cents. I will put my 223 skills against a lot of high cal guys LOL!! That little 55gr Barnes is nasty round.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6109090
12/30/15 04:54 AM
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Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 90
klp
Outdoorsman
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Outdoorsman
Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 90 |
I am no expert but 6 years I hunted with a .222 and it worked great. I think a .223 will do just fine, I don't' see the need for all these higher caliber rounds, unless you are shooting far away. My dad had a 30-06 and thought it was way too much. He felt it went to fast and had deer run further (but always died). I shoot at 25-06 and I think it is a little much, but it is so accurate, I can't resist. My dad currently shoots a .223 and it does perfectly well.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: klp]
#6109238
12/30/15 12:30 PM
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Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 4,200
dawaba
Extreme Tracker
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Extreme Tracker
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 4,200 |
I've never understood why a perfectly rational thinking deer hunter would choose a .223 for his expensive trophy buck hunt, while standing in the gun safe along-side are perfectly serviceable rifles in .25-06, 7mm-08, and .30-06. I want a load that will perform under adverse circumstances--when the chips are down--than one that requires "putting the bullet in the right spot" (a mantra you repeat ceaselessly while nodding to each other).
Now, if you're culling does, head-shooting hogs, thinning out the coyotes and prairie dogs, or even looking for a management buck, a heavy 70-gr pill from your .223 might be a good choice, but a 200 pound mature whitetail buck should give you pause to reconsider, at least in my view.
That said, and I've related this before, I know very well an Inupiat Eskimo in Alaska who runs his trap line in Alaska while carrying only a Ruger Ranch Rifle. This is grizzly country and early and late in the trapping season, the bears are out of their dens and foraging.....and hungry. When asked what ammo he prefers for grizzly medicine, he just shrugs and replies that he buys the cheapest stuff available on the local co-op shelf.
It seems that my Inupiat friend gives little thought to ammo adequacy, just as some of us do. It's almost become a competition to see who can push the envelope the farthest in his search for little pills to bag big animals.
What was ever wrong with your 7mm-08 or .270?
"For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple.....and wrong." H. L. Mencken
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: dawaba]
#6109327
12/30/15 02:05 PM
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Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 94
Ackley_improved
Outdoorsman
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Outdoorsman
Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 94 |
I've never understood why a perfectly rational thinking deer hunter would choose a .223 for his expensive trophy buck hunt, while standing in the gun safe along-side are perfectly serviceable rifles in .25-06, 7mm-08, and .30-06. I want a load that will perform under adverse circumstances--when the chips are down--than one that requires "putting the bullet in the right spot" (a mantra you repeat ceaselessly while nodding to each other).
----SNIP----
What was ever wrong with your 7mm-08 or .270? Consider a 200 yard shot on a that trophy buck from a 7-08 vs a properly loaded .223: 7-08, nosler 140 at 2800 - .4 mil elevation, and 2400fps on target. 223, 62 tsx at 2900 - .5 mil elevation, and 2260fps on target. Consider also the significant reduction in recoil, and the fact that you can (should) pile primers at the range for less than half the cost. I'm failing to see the downside...especially on thin skinned, medium game animals. The .223, properly loaded, drops them well beyond fine, and I've zero reservation in that regard.
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Ackley_improved]
#6109370
12/30/15 02:31 PM
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Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 7,192
therancher
THF Trophy Hunter
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THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 7,192 |
"I want a load that will perform under adverse circumstances--when the chips are down--than one that requires "putting the bullet in the right spot" "
Thanks Dwaba. That belief IMO is exactly why I've had several more hunters lose nice bucks shooting 30 cal than shooting .22 cal.
I have seen the opposite of that belief proven over and over again.
Crotchety old bastidge
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Ackley_improved]
#6109371
12/30/15 02:31 PM
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Joined: Dec 2015
Posts: 574
nyalubwe
Tracker
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Tracker
Joined: Dec 2015
Posts: 574 |
And judging by your handle....a .223AI would be better yet! I certainly hope so, because its my "go to" rifle for deer. I have opted for 55 grain TTSX though, and it has been excellent in any of my AIs....
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Re: Hunting w/ 223
[Re: Smeb]
#6109434
12/30/15 03:12 PM
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Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968
dogdown23
Tracker
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Tracker
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 968 |
I'll throw in my .20 cents worth. I've hunted deer all my life, taken the wife, kids, ect. I shoot a Remington 700 30-06. Bought it as a junior in high school when I was legally old enough to purchase a gun. It's killed many deer and the occasional pig. Right behind the shoulder and never have to do a track job. The wife and kids shoot a 243, using 95gr hornadys. Most shots are under 100 yards for them. Every deer they've shot even with perfect shot placement takes it and I end up tracking for 100 to 800 yards. That's fine except when the deer cross on neighbors places or get to the thick stuff which makes it hard to recover. One thing I love more than deer hunting is predator hunting. I've used a 223 for the longest time. Ive seen coyotes and fox take a 223 behind the shoulder in the lungs, even the heart and still run several hundred yards. I've lost contests because every now and then u can't find them. I've seen fox take a 223 in the shoulder, blow his guts out and still manage to make it another 200 yards dragging them 5 yards behind him. 223 is adequate for coyotes and fox but I'm moving to the 243 if I'm hunting coyotes only this year. My thoughts are if a 35lb coyote or 10lb fox can take a 223 and still make it several hundred yards, sometimes to never be found. I can't imagine having it as my go to gun for deer. I wonder how many who swear by it for deer have lost just as many deer as they've recovered? Mind boggling. But hey to each his own.
Dogdown
The only thing that'll stop a bad man with a gun, is a good man with a gun.
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