johnlittletree
Well-Known Member
Last year I got the opportunity to help guide in the Bristol Bay area of Alaska for brown bear. It was a great experience and it's about all I think about now. Headed back in August 19. Our first client we had was shooting a 338 win mag and I thought nothing of it. Well after poor performance on a brown bear at 100+/- yards, tracking it into an alder patch and having to finish her with a 375 Ruger mag. Skip ahead a couple days to bear number two. Shot at about the same distance, bear takes off into the alders never to be seen again, ending the hunt for the client, costing him a trophy fee and really upsetting me. I don't like to leave a wounded animal in the field. It got me thinking is 338wm enough gun? It wasn't till the next day we flew out of camp I saw his bullet selection, 200 grain sst....I'm guessing here is our problem. Caliber is discussed with the client but never bullet selection. No, as a helper/assistant and now apprentice working towards my guide license its not my place to suggest what bullet to use. With the clients we have, alot of them have little hunting experience, they go buy a fancy gun in a large caliber and the first box of bullets they see and go for it.
So going forth in preparation for the bear hunts we are now wanting to suggest bullets for the clients to use for a given caliber. 338 and 375 are by far the most used. I was thinking Nosler partition? but after that I don't really know. Thought about Barnes, but will they expand at close range? Would like some more input on 338 win mag, 375 hh and 375 Ruger. Factory ammo, I doubt any of these guys reload.
Hope you made it through my long/short story and don't bash on me......I'm far from a writer!
It is if you do not load something idiotic like a VLD bullet designed for target shooting with slightly harder lead alloy and repacked as a Hunting bullet. In fact a 30-06 would do the job with a 220 grain round nose. I do not get Brown Bear in my area just Black Bear. People have been using 45-70 and even 44 Mag hand guns in a pinch. It takes the right bullet something tough and as always good shot placement. The Black bear in my area are taken with bow, shotguns, 30-06SPR, 270 Win, and I think I even know a guy that shot one with a 243 Win....I had a friend stationed at Kodiac Island so I know that our little Black Bear are nothing compared to what you have roaming around Alsaka.
You want bullets like the Swift A-Frame 250-275gr., 250gr. Nosler Partition, Barnes TSX 250gr.-285gr., Speer GrandSlam 250gr.. Bear are not that hard to bring down if you get a good shot at their vitals the dreaded thing is the charging bear and making sure you can penetrate the skull. Bear are built really solid they have tons of muscle, fat and a lot of heavy tendons, ligaments and fascia. You have to have penetration above all else as a bear get's larger and larger. It has to have enough mass and weight retention and a heavy jacket so it will keep penetrating even if it hits bone. I am assuming you are not hunting bear at 1200m so ballistics is not the real issue it is bullet construction for penetration.
The reason a 300 WM or even a 30-06 can out perform a lot of 338WM Ammo at the ranges we hunt big bear at is that a 30Cal 220gr. round nose bullet is more likely to penetrate deeply than a 200gr.-250gr. in a .338 caliber bullet. At close range the difference in muzzle velocity is not an issue. If you have too much velocity at close range and a thin jacket on the bullet and hit bone good chance the bullet will fragment and stop penetrating. Most of the factory loaded ammo for .338 WM is what I call Elk and Moose Ammo especially the 200gr.-225gr. stuff with ballistic tips and and other fairly weak jackets. That said if shot placement is good even that stuff should get the job done. On a bear it is how thick they are and how fast they can run for a short distance making it hard to get a clean second shot if your in heavy brush or woods. The fur is so heavy that if you do not get a through and through you might not get a blood trail either. Quartering shots on a Brown Bear can be problematic again that is a lot of fatty meat and a lot of connective tissue to have to get through. I used one for years and I sold it to my Father in law and he took it to Afrika 3 times as he thin skinned game gun and harvested insane numbers of animals.
https://gundigest.com/gear-ammo/rel...es-338-winchester-magnum-the-original-alaskan