Sidearms & Scatterguns How Do You Carry Your Hunting Side arm

I typically always carry a Ruger 45 Colt in a cross draw holster I made awhile back. Cross draw seems to be easier to get the gun out with a pack on.

If I could carry a cut down 8 gauge double, I would. Bears are no joke and if I need to shoot one I want the best chance I can get. At least a cool story about blasting a hole in Pooh, for when people ask about the fucking bear tooth stuck in my skull.

Seriously though, big bore revolver, cross draw. One day it’ll be a 475 or 500 Linebaugh, but I have more immediately pressing priorities.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Ravenworks
Gunfighters Inc Kenai- Glock 17

No bears down here.
 

Attachments

  • 09A26484-C22E-46CD-8E78-2D1884C96899.jpeg
    09A26484-C22E-46CD-8E78-2D1884C96899.jpeg
    413 KB · Views: 234
For trail, woods, outdoors, I use a Dixie Gun Works 'Civil War' type shoulder holster. SAA holster slightly modified into an open end 'frog' style fits all of my big bore revolvers easily. Worn under jacket. Even in suburban / urban settings, if I am not anticipating taking off my outer jacket, it will be the shoulder rig. The belt is also compatible with holsters for my 1911 and Glock 21. Just swap 'em out.

Warm weather and shirtsleeve environments? Backpack carry it is.
 
Diamond D guide chest holster for my KRH444. When wearing a bino harness I move the gun to the side and lower. No problems.

My 10mm Silverback is just a Diamond D shoulder holster when fishing. Plenty to drop a bear on the Kenai river.
 
I have a S&W 329PD that I carry in a chest holster. It's really comfortable. It's similar to the Diamond D one, but I got mine from CorBon when they had a pro shop they were closing down in Sturgis SD. It has their logo engraved (?) on the leather. I paid $60.00 for it and it was money well spent. I also have a Galco hip holster for it, but haven't used it since getting the chest holster.
 
When I'm in the front country (trail running, hiking, etc.), I used a Hill People Gear Runner's Kit Bag for the Glock 20 SF (10mm). When I'm hunting further in, which means carrying a pack with a load bearing hip belt, I use a Safepacker holster from The Wilderness. I have tried multiple lower profile/quicker draw holsters for backcountry (Backcountry.com, please don't sue me to using that word!!) applications over the years, and none that I have tried protect the gun well. If the gun isn't covered in the backcountry, it's going to get rain, dirt, pine needles, etc. in it, and it's going to get wet. The Safepacker does a surprisingly good job keeping the firearm dry (even in sustained snow or rain storms), from getting banged up on rocks thanks to minimal padding, and and from getting gunk in it. I run the same Glock 20 SF w/ a Streamlight TLR-1 and an extra mag, and it fits in the Safepacker perfectly. It's not sexy, but man does it get the job done.

My sheep hunting guide used a mangearalaska holster for his .460 Rowland. It was slick for how he used it (around camp after we had meat in camp and walking in bear country at night).

Mark
 
If I have a pack on, which I usually do, I also use a Safepacker. I don’t live in grizzly country so it’s a HK45 loaded with super for the little bears and big kitties. The Safepacker is also very nice for more populated trails where I don’t want to spook the granolas. I slide it on the belt of my Osprey kid carrier and hikers probably think it’s full of cheerios.

The folks at The Wilderness are awesome, too. Visited them once while I was in Phoenix.
 
I carry my Glock 40 in a shoulder holster to the deer stand
 
Full flap holster on a leather belt. The belt goes over your clothes and you can adjust the drop so it is out of the way of your pack. Full flap is quick to access and provides very good protection for the firearm.

When in very cold environments I use a wool lined flap holster.

Epstein didn’t kill his self.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Genin
Kifaru tombstone on my pack belt. If I hunted areas with griz I’d likely go to a chest holster to have the pistol more accessible.

The tombstone keeps it protected from snow, rain and mud when I’m in the woods and rips open when needed

Also use a small Kydex trigger cover tied into the pouch.


When I’m trail running or skiing back home I use a hill people gear snubby cheat rig. Don’t care for it all too much but haven’t found a better option for carrying on really active stuff like running or CC skiing
 
I carry a 4" 629 on a Speed Beez holster in a cross draw fashion. This is out of the way of the pack, and I can carry my hunting rifle either in front across my body with the muzzle down, or over the shoulder with the muzzle up. There is no safety latch or lock, but I have the holster snugged down pretty good, it takes intent to pull it. I carry a speed loader in my front pocket in case it's needed. I hunt deer in central CA along the coast, we've seen black bears and mountain lions over the years.
 
My thinking is basically a couple little loops spaced out appropriately for the holster connection tabs and just using Chicago screws to hold them on the Kuiu.

If you watch the video FHF has on installing the holster it seems like it shouldn't take much ingenuity.

I'm still building the 10mm I'd be carrying while hunting so I haven't bothered to order the holster yet. The 80% large frame Glock is cool, but finding slides for a g20 is damn near impossible. Might as well buy the factory pistol for what the few slide available will cost you.
 
When rifle hunting, I agree. Most of my hunting is with a ML these days though. Bow hunters have similar issues.

I'd also wear it when bird hunting in bear country. It would be funner than hell to shoot a couple grouse then whack a black bear on the way back to the truck.

Every once in a while I see someone packing a side arm while hunting with a long gun. I always wonder what kind of trouble they are expecting.
 
  • Like
Reactions: TACC
When rifle hunting, I agree. Most of my hunting is with a ML these days though. Bow hunters have similar issues.

I'd also wear it when bird hunting in bear country. It would be funner than hell to shoot a couple grouse then whack a black bear on the way back to the truck.

Every once in a while I see someone packing a side arm while hunting with a long gun. I always wonder what kind of trouble they are expecting.


----------
I always wonder what kind of trouble they are expecting.
----------


The trails and the woods are not free of criminals, ne'er-do-wells and flat out psychos. Plenty of stories of hunters and backpackers encountering seedy type SOB's out there or stumbling upon a crime in progress, MS-13 and other gang members burying a chopped up corpse, caches of drugs and money that may or may not be guarded, etc... Novels like Deathwatch, by Robb White, may have slightly exaggerated the tale of a seemingly normal boy next door who is actually a cold blooded killer who rides out into the desert and uses a scoped rifle to randomly pink-mist stranded travelers for his own entertainment. After all, Deathwatch is a neo-Western, in the same category as No Country For Old Men and just as raw and brutal as the latter... But psychopaths, some as diabolical as you can imagine, do exist out there.

I have exclusively hunted with a bow plenty of times. My Ruger Vaquero .357 Mag or Auto-Ordnance 1911 is always riding with me in a shoulder rig or haversack, easily reached and drawn if needed. Of course, I can just use the broadhead tipped arrow as a spear and slam it into something if I need to, but the pistol provides me with even more assurance...
 
  • Like
Reactions: TACC
I've always figured that if something needs to be shot while I'm hunting, I'll use the rifle in my hands...

I hunt with a shotgun quite a bit. Have used my sidearm to put down boar when they are in range and take an intrest when calling turkey. I usually use an HK USP 45 with 45 Super ammo but am seriously thinking tossing a little Colt Commando over my back instead as I do pass on pigs that would be easy shots with a rifle. Actually working up a pig load for it this weekend to make the switch for the spring Rios.
 
I carry my G43 either in a side holster reverse draw on a Superday pack or in a IWB holster clipped to the top of my bibs(chest carry) with a coat over it. As I hunt public land, you'll never know what you'll run into.
 
Tell about your holsters and preferences.

Carrying a sidearm while bow hunting is a PITA. Most holsters suck for one reason or another. Some attach to your pack belt but once you drop the pack, you are unarmed. Not great. Others just get in the way, a chest rig won't work with a bino bivy, drop holsters dirty your gun when hiking through tall stuff covered with morning dew. I dislike trying to draw quickly with a safety strap on the gun. For this reason I bought a cheap Kydex holster from https://wethepeopleholsters.com/col...31-wethepeopleholsters?variant=12955000668258.

I ordered an extra set of screws and glued em all in so the two piece holster stays together (otherwise the screws loosen over time which pissed me off) and now it's good to go. I can side it over the pack belt and once I drop my pack, side it onto my pants (with or without a belt) instantly. When I put it on my pack belt I slip it in behind a small pouch (Kifaru) which protects it when I'm busting brush. Problem finally solved...many holsters later.

OWB-01_1000-R1_1024x1024@2x (1).jpg

OWB-01_1000-L3_1024x1024@2x.jpg

holster-owb-tension.png
 
Last edited by a moderator: