Go | New | Find | Notify | Tools | Reply |
one of us |
hi it seems shooting a charging bear in shoulder or lung and heart area is not effective to stop a charging bear. which spot is best to aim for better stopping? i could guess head regards danny | ||
|
one of us |
Usually there is no time to "aim" depending on the situation, you point and shoot on a moving target at close quarters. The body shot may not drop a charging bear but sometimes will turn him off course. The brain shot is the best if you can hit it, if you fail, then keep on shooting. Every bear charge situation is different, I've been involved in one and it was pretty stressful but had a happy ending. Hopefully, never again. MtnHtr | |||
|
one of us |
Before she gets to the check-out line. | |||
|
one of us |
AS a guide friend of mine was once quoted to say.. "the only SURE way to stop a dangerous animal from charging is to take away it's credit cards." Otherwise, you are pretty much stuck with head/brain shot or a shot that hits spine or breaks a major bone that is used for locomotion. Had a black bear make a bluff charge on me while defending his dead moose while I was moose hunting. He probably didn't weigh much more then me and his heart wasn't in it so long as I didn't come any closer. (maybe he thought the muzzle of the .375H&H pointed at him gave him wisdom beyond his years) Was aiming at the tip of the nose and I figured the 300gr partition would have hit somewhere the top of head spine if I had to shoot if I was high. Would take out throat and chest if low. Either probably would make him regroup elsewhere. | |||
|
one of us |
Reloader, shooting a bears nose to break its jaws so it can't bite you too badly... Good for cats too, but the paws still get you... I've been lured me into some kind of joke here I think. Karl. | |||
|
one of us |
A D-9 Cat works well too. | |||
|
Powered by Social Strata |
Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
Visit our on-line store for AR Memorabilia