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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Side Arm for Grizzly Country
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<blockquote data-quote="memtb" data-source="post: 2034163" data-attributes="member: 75451"><p>Chris, many years ago, when I first started hand loading for my .357 Mag., I pushed them to the point of "very" difficult extraction.....then backed - off a bit. With these "deer load", I I shot a raccoon on a tree limb twice...either hit (one just behind the ribs, one just behind the shoulder) would have been fatal. The coon after the second hit, fell from the limb and ran approximately 50 yards. </p><p></p><p> While a bear, or anything else, can be killed with a .357 Mag.....it's a long way from a "stopping cartridge"! memtb</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="memtb, post: 2034163, member: 75451"] Chris, many years ago, when I first started hand loading for my .357 Mag., I pushed them to the point of “very” difficult extraction.....then backed - off a bit. With these “deer load”, I I shot a raccoon on a tree limb twice...either hit (one just behind the ribs, one just behind the shoulder) would have been fatal. The coon after the second hit, fell from the limb and ran approximately 50 yards. While a bear, or anything else, can be killed with a .357 Mag.....it’s a long way from a “stopping cartridge”! memtb [/QUOTE]
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Side Arm for Grizzly Country
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