Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Thanks for all the replies. I’m really interested in something like a .280AI, But I don’t reload. I have a hard time getting ammo even in the best of times. I can’t mail order because all the mail comes in on a plane and there are only two shops in town that stock ammo. So I end up gravitating towards really generic calibers just so I’ll have a better selection of factory loads to choose from.
Where handguns excel in a battle with an animal, is when you can smell it’s breath.
They hunt Grizzly with bow and arrow. Now that takes balls! I imagine they are allowed a sidearm for backup, but still.
View attachment 7518958
I've hunted Kodiak Island and have had lots of close encounter's there too. In my opinion Wyoming Grizzlies are alot more aggressive than fat well fed Kodiak Brown Bears. We have on average 3 maulings a year in my county alone.
The logic of carrying a 375 for deer because you're afraid of bears is stupid. If your hunting big bears that's a complete different scenario. When I hunt rabbits in grizz country I should shoot a 375??
Bear spray and sidearms are what's needed for personal protection in bear country.
Here's a "tiny" Wyoming Grizz on my trail cam where I bowhunt elk every year.
View attachment 7518964
if i know i’m going to battle and it’s my ass on the line, i’ll take a rifle....each time, everytime. against man, or beast. the ONLY time the handgun has the advantage is when you dont know you are going to battle. in other words, you probably dont need anything, but JUST IN CASE, you want something on you that beats your fingernails.
i carry a handgun 24/7/365. but i’d NEVER forgo the chance to have a rifle in my hands when it’s “for all the marbles”. and only a fool would.
What bullets do you use in your 375?Yes, in big bear country I carry 375. Deer hunting, salmon fishing etc.
It’s not hard. Really does not even warrant discussion. I suppose it depends on how much you value your life or how much you want to rely on others.
Odd you would carry a deer rifle, a handgun and bear spray instead of simply making the right rifle choice.
Handguns are for fighting your way to your rifle or shotgun.
That said, we have big cats here in Wyoming. Only a fool would suggest that one could effectively deploy a rifle when one of those has without warning, hit you from behind like a ton of bricks and the only reason you are half conscious and still in the fight, is because the thing is still realizing that backpack in it’s mouth .......is not your neck.
If you are on the ground in an existential fight with an animal, a handgun might get you enough distance and time to deploy your rifle and shotgun, effectively....
I'm in WI and never had any dealings with the big bears, but what about a 12 gauge with slugs or sabots? I suspect it may do the job for the little deer and the big bears with both in close quarters. Ammo plentiful, recoil manageable, guns available and handy in brush. Just throwing it out there for conversation since i dont really know and it hasnt been brought up in the thread yet.
Better just carry the 458 Lott. This is no time to puss out!
I’m kind of joking, but the 458 Lott with light loaded 300/350’s is not too bad recoil-wise and quit grid on deer, i’d bet.
In reality, I’m likely carrying my 300 Sherman deer rifle and my 45 Colt in a shoulder rig to have a gun on me all the time. In my limited brown bear experience, your most likely to run into a bear gutting fish, near trash or near cooking food. What these all have in common is I’m not likely to have my hunting rifle in hand when cooking and fishing.