Since you’re in Colorado I’d roll 6CM if you were south in NM I’d say 22 CM. I also wouldnt want a mono since you aren’t required, there for no good reason for one. In other words of the two options you gave flip a coin if you shoot then the sameI know both will do the job if I do mine, just curious which one people with experience would recommend. I will be hunting in CO this September. I have not done this hunt before or hunted bear before. From what I'm hearing it sounds likely shots will be in or around thick oak brush.
I have a Rifles Inc 300 win mag with a 4-16x Huskemaw scope shooting 180gr Nosler E tips at 2900fps. It shoots them well and I've taken a variety of game with it over the years.
My other option is a Browning X bolt Hells Canyon Speed in 270 win with a Huskemaw 3-12x shooting Hornady 145gr ELD-X factory ammo at 2880fps. I haven't owned it as long, but I've shot it a lot preparing for a muley hunt last year and it also shoots really well.
Both rifles are about the same weight, accuracy, and have similar scopes and triggers. I have confidence shooting both. Velocities and BC are pretty close between them. It's mainly a decision between best terminal performance in a brushy environment, would you prefer a mono-metal 30 caliber bullet, or a more fragile .277 bullet?
Thanks for your help.
Hi, i am terrified of the idea of tracking a bear because i hunt bears in bushy areas with swamps and i dont have an ATV.Yes, I've been responsible for the killing of hundreds. At this stage in my life, around 300 of them.
This whole hole plugging up nonsense is non sensical . I've had bears squirting blood out of them more often than slim blood trails . And every slim blood trail has come from a shoulder or wannabe neck shooting deer hunter . Infact the quickest kill I've ever seen on a black bear was a 80gr .243 from a new hunters gun . He was so dead he never moaned perfect low elbow shot and an absolute bloodbath
Around 300? How you do that?Yes, I've been responsible for the killing of hundreds. At this stage in my life, around 300 of them.
To be clear ... you hit no vitals ... or bone? .. you've just reinforced my point . It's easy to aim to high and not hit anything of substance . AIM lowerSo, I saw an example of this "plugging up", though, it would never have occured to me to use that term.
Bears can be difficult to determine features on: Hair is long and consistent. I had a bear standing up on his hind legs in lower light. He appeared to be close to fully broadside, but he must have been more rotated (less broadside) than I perceived with his head turned fully broadside. I shot, he dropped down to all 4s and started walking briskly to my left. I saw an opening he would hit and dropped him there with a 2nd shot.
Upon inspection, my first shot entered the backstrap and exited the center of chest with little expansion.
While butchering him out, I noted this was a fully sucking chest wound as any pressure on the rib cage resulted in a sucking sound. No blood at the entry or exit wound, no blood where I shot him and no blood in the 40 yards between the 1st and 2nd shot. Backstrap was very damaged and only partially salvageable.
Only time that has happened, but I was a bit surprised. Every other bear I've shot (admittingly, not too many) has dropped on impact. This particularly shot did not. I aim center mass
To be clear ... you hit no vitals ... or bone? .. you've just reinforced my point . It's easy to aim to high and not hit anything of substance . AIM lower