Vandal 44
WKR
Springfield XDS 40. I like it a lot, small and light
One more for a Glock 20!
A lot of us Alaskans train with the G20... Some of us even use it CC during the winter. But you are right, folks need to train on a regular basis, both with professionals and on their own.The 10mm is a great round mostly because it's big and travels fast. Less compromise than either going small/fast (9mm) vs big/slow (.45)
Problem is though that it's big and not many people carry it, much less train with it and get good at controlling it (follow up shots)
I'd rather not risk my life against a 4-legged or 2-legged threat on a weapon that I don't train with regularly
A lot of us Alaskans train with the G20... Some of us even use it CC during the winter. But you are right, folks need to train on a regular basis, both with professionals and on their own.
I too prefer my G19 for most scenarios, but when bundled up for winters the G20 is not to bad to conceal. I also like having that extra "oomph" when hiking around town during the winter. Between the cranky moose and heavily bundled folks it gives an extra edge, or so I think..Ha! I knew someone would come along and prove me wrong! I'd be hard pressed to conceal a G20 during the 10 months of summer that we get here in TX...that's why I stick with my puny G19
Roger that! .357Mag, .44mag, or .10mm or where it is at, IMO. .44 or 10mm is my preferred choice when Brown Bears are in the mix.... I just really like shooting my G20. Its a great pistol...Nothin wrong with a a Glock 9mm. My EDC is a G17, wife has a G19. However it doesn't go into the woods.
Wow - lots of suggestions, thanks. One question though, since barrel length affects performance I would think that is critical, regardless of caliber (a longer 9 mm might be better – more KE - than a short 10 mm)? But don't they measure autos and revolvers differently? I thought autos were measure from the pin, revolver the gap. That way a 3” auto is really sub 2” barrel? It seems one inch from 2”- 3” really adds a lot of velocity?
Wow - lots of suggestions, thanks. One question though, since barrel length affects performance I would think that is critical, regardless of caliber (a longer 9 mm might be better – more KE - than a short 10 mm)? But don't they measure autos and revolvers differently? I thought autos were measure from the pin, revolver the gap. That way a 3” auto is really sub 2” barrel? It seems one inch from 2”- 3” really adds a lot of velocity?
I too prefer my G19 for most scenarios, but when bundled up for winters the G20 is not to bad to conceal. I also like having that extra "oomph" when hiking around town during the winter. Between the cranky moose and heavily bundled folks it gives an extra edge, or so I think..
I probably wouldn't worry much about the two-legged threats...it's too dang cold in AK for mischief
I can't disagree about the extra punch from the 10mm
I dunno about that. I've had some less than stellar run-ins with folks in the back country, I carry more for the encounters with mankind than animals!
More tounge-in-cheek than serious, but I am kinda surprised that even in the backcountry you're running into those types of people...
Believe it or not, there are several regions here in Alaska that are well, not the best of places for a guy like me to roam. Guys like me are simply not welcome in certain places.
I've had people pretend/try to ram me with their boat, yell obscenities, try to steal fuel, stab our raft.
Believe it or not, there are several regions here in Alaska that are well, not the best of places for a guy like me to roam. Guys like me are simply not welcome in certain places.
I've had people pretend/try to ram me with their boat, yell obscenities, try to steal fuel, stab our raft.
What are "guys like me" referring to? Ive heard of hawaiian locals not taking kindly to visitors. Is it the eskimo folks that dont care for you?
One thing to watch out for is in MT you cannot carry a firearm during bow season if you are bow hunting. Now that being said I carry a G17. Just make sure you read the regs for where you are hunting.