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Thanks to my favorite furred friend Charlie, I was able to take another hog -- a 95 pound sow -- with the 120 grain Barnes TAC-TX AAC Blackout bullet just before full darkness this evening. I happened to be outside for all of 5 minutes when Charlie raised his head and held it high in the air, alerting me to the presence of something to our south. I had the 23" 30-30 on sandbags in case a hog did appear, but this was from another direction entirely. So I stepped over to the yard fence and found a dark spot milling about in the grass. There was no clear shot, and it disappeared in a few seconds. Poor Charlie never has had a reputation for patience, and he took off, all-the-while trying to sniff out what exactly was down there. Fortunately, he veered off course just a bit and lost the scent in the swirling breeze (he's older, has failing eyesight and could have gotten himself hurt). The saving grace was that there were 2 deep sloughs between the house and the hog, which helped foil Charlie's best effort. Anyway, in the meantime, the hog re-emerged, so I leaned across a fence post and sent a bullet downrange towards the 160 yard target. It was a hurried effort, and there was some intervening grass near but not across the vitals. I felt good about the shot, though, as I was certain the illuminated dot of the FD7 reticle had intersected the vitals on the slight quartering presentation. After touching the trigger, I lost sight of the hog, but within seconds saw a black form go over the top of the creek bank some 50 yards from where the hog originally stood. I thought I heard bullet impact but was not completely certain. To make a long story short, the there was a second hog. The one I shot at dropped on the spot, the 120 grain bullet taking it through the shoulder and exiting approximately 3 inches behind the shoulder on the opposite side. Blood was much in evidence and the reason I converted the photo to black and white. The internal damage was substantial and nearly reminded me of the work of a soft cup and core bullet. That was due in part to secondary bone fragments, which helped in completely wrecking the lungs. In fact, a small portion of lung was actually hanging out of the exit wound, which featured 2 broken ribs and measured nearly 2" in diameter. MV of the load, by the way, is 2630 fps. Bobby Μολὼν λαβέ The most important thing in life is not what we do but how and why we do it. - Nana Mouskouri | ||
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good stuff BT. Glad you were able to connect. Under the weather and staying in town this weekend, but hope to do some perforatin' of my own next weekend Plus I will be hunting with my son and two of my Grandsons for the first time! ya! GWB | |||
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I hope you get to feeling better, my friend. Enjoy your family time next weekend...and post some pictures because I know someone is going to put something on the ground. Bobby Μολὼν λαβέ The most important thing in life is not what we do but how and why we do it. - Nana Mouskouri | |||
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Bobby, how many hogs does that .30-30 barrel have to its credit? Nice work, as usual. There is hope, even when your brain tells you there isn’t. – John Green, author | |||
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Thanks, Bill. I just got the 30-30 barrel a few months ago, so it has some catching up to do withs its brethren 6.5x30-30 AI and 7mm Bullberry. I actually sold my 7-30 Waters barrel in order to get this one, and I was hoping I didn't regret the move as the Waters made bacon, so to speak, many times and was utterly reliable. But I was intrigued by this particular bullet and its low-velocity potential -- and so far, I am smiling. Bobby Μολὼν λαβέ The most important thing in life is not what we do but how and why we do it. - Nana Mouskouri | |||
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This may sound strange, but I'll be happy when deer season is over and I get the green flag to get back after the pigs!!! I do miss it-- An old pilot, not a bold pilot, aka "the pig murdering fool" | |||
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Great story/great shot. Congratulations Bobby Even the rocks don't last forever. | |||
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