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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Bullet for .375 H&H Moose/Grizzly
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<blockquote data-quote="BillPhifer" data-source="post: 1910923" data-attributes="member: 114391"><p>I have had problems with an Alaska Brown Bear and my .338 Winchester Magnum with hand loaded 275 grain Speer bullets performed very well. I considered my .338 with the 275 gr Speer my long range Go To rifle-bullet combination. It performed well on long range Barren Ground Caribou. I took three Boone & Crockett Club book moose (2 - Canadian & 1 - Alaskan). I took one with a Winchester .300 H&H Mag, 180 grain Sierra Boat Tail. Another with the .338 Winchester Mag. And one with a .270 150 grain Sierra Boat Tail. I was surprised that my .270 Win did so well on the big Canadian moose. All three were one shot kills and they dropped in their tracks. I have a high opinion of the .375 H&H.</p><p></p><p>Now about the .375 H&H. I have used this cartridge twice when hunting. Once on a Polar Bear and the other a Bison. I used Remington factory 270 grain ammo. I find the 375 to be spectular. When fired the recoil is more rolling than the sharper shoulder hit of a .338 Win Mag. I was most impressed with the bullet hit the polar. That is, the energy of my bullet turned his shoulder meat literally into jelly. The bear never turned to show me his side. After he saw me he kept coming straight on over pressure ridges and even jumped into open water that formed when the wind opened the ice pack a bit. I scoped the rifle with a Leupold 1- 4x. The bison went down hard and fast, too, when that 270 grain bullet hit him on his left shoulder.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BillPhifer, post: 1910923, member: 114391"] I have had problems with an Alaska Brown Bear and my .338 Winchester Magnum with hand loaded 275 grain Speer bullets performed very well. I considered my .338 with the 275 gr Speer my long range Go To rifle-bullet combination. It performed well on long range Barren Ground Caribou. I took three Boone & Crockett Club book moose (2 - Canadian & 1 - Alaskan). I took one with a Winchester .300 H&H Mag, 180 grain Sierra Boat Tail. Another with the .338 Winchester Mag. And one with a .270 150 grain Sierra Boat Tail. I was surprised that my .270 Win did so well on the big Canadian moose. All three were one shot kills and they dropped in their tracks. I have a high opinion of the .375 H&H. Now about the .375 H&H. I have used this cartridge twice when hunting. Once on a Polar Bear and the other a Bison. I used Remington factory 270 grain ammo. I find the 375 to be spectular. When fired the recoil is more rolling than the sharper shoulder hit of a .338 Win Mag. I was most impressed with the bullet hit the polar. That is, the energy of my bullet turned his shoulder meat literally into jelly. The bear never turned to show me his side. After he saw me he kept coming straight on over pressure ridges and even jumped into open water that formed when the wind opened the ice pack a bit. I scoped the rifle with a Leupold 1- 4x. The bison went down hard and fast, too, when that 270 grain bullet hit him on his left shoulder. [/QUOTE]
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Bullet for .375 H&H Moose/Grizzly
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