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Not saying they don't work, they absolutely do. You should have the choice to use what you prefer, as should others. You use monos for prairie dogs and such?Damn, I'll have to let these guys know. All one shot DRT kills with monos from 20 to 350 yards from Alaska to Florida lol
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Rather than capitulate when someone waives a conservation flag, I believe it is very reasonable and necessary to point out the incongruities and hypocrisy. You/we/ I need to learn to evaluate and being able to correct/redirect, in a way that fosters conversation, the narrative if it doesn't hold up to scrutiny.Yeah, this is where I'm at with it. If hunters lead the effort here, we can shape the narrative better. Voluntary adoption in focused areas where it actually matters. If we dig our heels in and turn this into a political fight with no room for discussion, we might have a losing battle that ends up in bad legislation and blanket mandates. I also think CA shot themselves in the foot with their lead bans, and that it isn't going to lead to the outcome they wanted anyway.
I mostly shoot copper ammo, have for about ~10 years. It's clearly got its own limitations and I think a lot of folks who've had bad experiences with it, it's because they didn't understand or appreciate those differences. It needs to go fast, the low density means it's a longer bullet and you may need to step down in bullet weight to use the same twist rate, and it has a pretty narrow wound channel. Almost like a broadhead that can break through bone.
BC is usually on the low side because copper is less dense, but for the vast majority of hunters who shouldn't be shooting past ~300 yards anyway, that's not significant. For a lot of the more specialized, skilled, long-range shooters here, that might be a different story than your average "one box of ammo a year" hunter.
Personally, I'm happy with a 300-400yd effective range, and I don't mind the tradeoff to minimize meat loss and not leave lead on the side of a mountain where it's definitely getting golden eagles scavenging on it. I don't begrudge people making different choices.
I’d be real curious as to what Raptor species haven’t migrated out of CO by Rifle season, and how many and % remain in the Mtn’s through late fall winter.
We should all be wary of those waiving the virtue flag
We are all free to believe whatever we want.I'm a believer in the assertion that lead form dead animals shot by a rifle can cause lead poisoning in these birds.
Last year I tried copper with my 6.5 creed. Learned a lesson from that. 6.5 and copper dont mix. It is too fast and at 80 yards i shot a buck a bit behind the sweet spot and it just stood there. I took an additional shot and hit about 2 inches lower. The buck moved up the hill about 30 yards stopped and turned and looked back. Hit hit him again through the neck and he took off. Tracked him with my hunting partner and found him down next to a log. As we were about 10 yards from him he jumped up and took off my hunting buddy dropped him for good with a 300 win mag. All three of my copper 6.5 creed went in and out of the buck the same size hole.CPW is asking hunter's to participate in a lead-free pilot program in select units for 2025 deer/elk rifle hunts where where is a known presence of bald and golden eagle activity.
I'm curious about this. My initial thoughts are that I can imagine a shotgun blast of lead pellets could have an adverse effect on such birds of prey, but how much would a single projectile (that likely would have a pass through on deer) really effect these birds? Is there research available on this topic that you guys have found to be a good read?
I'm willing to switch to copper for the season I have this year as I'm not really dead set on shooting lead. Do you guys/gals think that Colorado is trending towards lead-free units altogether?
They wont give up until it happens. Copper just does not do the job as lead core does. My personal option is there will be more wounded animals (even with a solid shot) that will eventually die after traveling miles with a solid copper projectile shot vs a solid hit with a lead core bullet.NY is pushing to ban lead ammo on state land. Its just a matter of time. They tried to push it through in 2023 also.
Warren Harden is no hunter. Anti hunter for sure. He is chairman of the board at the Sutton center. Member of the Audobon society. You have been duped .I've actually done some stuff with the long time head biologist at the Sutton Center. I really blew my mind how much lead fragments. Even cup and core bullets.
He's a hunter, very pro 2a and small government. Also very pro not hunting with lead.
Lead-poisoning of Eagles – Sutton Center https://www.suttoncenter.org/conservation/saving-species/bald-eagles/lead-poisoning-eagles/
I've shot most of the copper bullets out there(I shoot lead free purely out of choice) and find that the fragmenting ones have better terminal performance then the expanding ones. To that end, I really like Apex.CPW is asking hunter's to participate in a lead-free pilot program in select units for 2025 deer/elk rifle hunts where where is a known presence of bald and golden eagle activity.
I'm curious about this. My initial thoughts are that I can imagine a shotgun blast of lead pellets could have an adverse effect on such birds of prey, but how much would a single projectile (that likely would have a pass through on deer) really effect these birds? Is there research available on this topic that you guys have found to be a good read?
I'm willing to switch to copper for the season I have this year as I'm not really dead set on shooting lead. Do you guys/gals think that Colorado is trending towards lead-free units altogether?
Expanding copper, like barnes I'm guessing, makes a really small wound channel. I don't think I'd hunt anything with less than a 30 cal in expanding copper anymore. And honestly I'd like to see bigger.Last year I tried copper with my 6.5 creed. Learned a lesson from that. 6.5 and copper dont mix. It is too fast and at 80 yards i shot a buck a bit behind the sweet spot and it just stood there. I took an additional shot and hit about 2 inches lower. The buck moved up the hill about 30 yards stopped and turned and looked back. Hit hit him again through the neck and he took off. Tracked him with my hunting partner and found him down next to a log. As we were about 10 yards from him he jumped up and took off my hunting buddy dropped him for good with a 300 win mag. All three of my copper 6.5 creed went in and out of the buck the same size hole.
Which one is from Alaska?Damn, I'll have to let these guys know. All one shot DRT kills with monos from 20 to 350 yards from Alaska to Florida lol
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Don’t set a cam on all my gut piles but we have set a few over the last couple years since we had bear tags. 95% of the carcasses were eaten by Yotes next prolific animals were magpies, crows, and grey jays, few foxes and a mt. Lion, yet to see a raptor on my carcasses, not saying it doesn’t happen, honestly probably happens a lot more out east or high mountain valleys than in the timbered mountains…Do copper bullets kill yes are they as efficient as lead I don’t believe so. My thoughts are coyotes consume a carcasses main meat more often then birds of prey pick up scraps. I do not believe they are decreasing in population they are increasing to the point of vermin in the winter. If Colorado is seeing a decline they should stop building in prime habitat. We have a big snowy owl population mid Feb- April I am much more concerned about them. They are better hunters than the eagles though that are predominantly scavengers.
I haven't. But it wouldn't surprise me to see it.Has anyone else heard lead free referred to as modern ammunition?
Don’t set a cam on all my gut piles but we have set a few over the last couple years since we had bear tags. 95% of the carcasses were eaten by Yotes next prolific animals were magpies, crows, and grey jays, few foxes and a mt. Lion, yet to see a raptor on my carcasses, not saying it doesn’t happen, honestly probably happens a lot more out east or high mountain valleys than in the timbered mountains…
pretty fun actually, we were going to hang a tree stand over one and sit for a bear but we ended up not doing it, man with a tree stand, some patience and a suppressed .22 I think you could kill a bunch of coyotesI'm gonna start doing this!