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Tell me about the 450 Bushmaster
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<blockquote data-quote="Muddyboots" data-source="post: 1601441" data-attributes="member: 63925"><p>Doug,</p><p>Thanks for the props and it is really important to know why this law was pursued. The primary focus was to improve hunter sustainability, hunter recruitment for youth, women, slighter stature folks and even old hunters that have become recoil sensitive. I am almost 70 and saw how hunter recruitment was falling and thought this was a really path to take to help stave the reduction. It is still happening but wonder if this law wasn't there how much worse would it be? This law opened up the door for kids to shoot at the range with their parents or mentors with a firearm that didn't knock them off the bench and back onto their smart phones. When kids, women, slight build or even someone who hates getting their butt kicked by a slug off the bench can shoot a firearm accurately without getting slammed such as with a .44 Mag, .357 Mag, .357 Max etc and shoot economically it becomes fun and you get people more enthused about deer hunting. Five slugs are expensive while 50 rounds of .44 mag is slightly more but heck of lot more fun to shoot. The added bonus for other hunters to pursue .450 AR platforms, bolts and so on added to the success of the law. I am very comfortable saying it has brought people back into deer hunting. I am at the range a lot and I see kids there quite a bit with .44 Mag rifles, .357 Mag rifles (Ruger has a bolt for both .44 and .357) and so on. </p><p></p><p>If anyone in another state is interested in getting more info I would share whatever I have to help them go forward with it.</p><p>Muddy</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Muddyboots, post: 1601441, member: 63925"] Doug, Thanks for the props and it is really important to know why this law was pursued. The primary focus was to improve hunter sustainability, hunter recruitment for youth, women, slighter stature folks and even old hunters that have become recoil sensitive. I am almost 70 and saw how hunter recruitment was falling and thought this was a really path to take to help stave the reduction. It is still happening but wonder if this law wasn't there how much worse would it be? This law opened up the door for kids to shoot at the range with their parents or mentors with a firearm that didn't knock them off the bench and back onto their smart phones. When kids, women, slight build or even someone who hates getting their butt kicked by a slug off the bench can shoot a firearm accurately without getting slammed such as with a .44 Mag, .357 Mag, .357 Max etc and shoot economically it becomes fun and you get people more enthused about deer hunting. Five slugs are expensive while 50 rounds of .44 mag is slightly more but heck of lot more fun to shoot. The added bonus for other hunters to pursue .450 AR platforms, bolts and so on added to the success of the law. I am very comfortable saying it has brought people back into deer hunting. I am at the range a lot and I see kids there quite a bit with .44 Mag rifles, .357 Mag rifles (Ruger has a bolt for both .44 and .357) and so on. If anyone in another state is interested in getting more info I would share whatever I have to help them go forward with it. Muddy [/QUOTE]
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Tell me about the 450 Bushmaster
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