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Author Topic: "Bear calibers"  (Read 10004 times)

Offline JDHasty

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #30 on: March 28, 2017, 08:46:08 AM »
Bear are tough critters, I think more wounded bear are never recovered than any other animal, a lot of the bear we get have been shot before and healed up, so it's not so much the size of the gun as it is hitting them well. Know that you will hit vitals or don't pull the trigger. Having said that, I do prefer larger calibers and/or lots of powder, but it's not necessary if you put the bullet where it belongs.

When I was young and hung out w/lots of hound guys the number one choice was 18.5 inch barrel Marlin 336 in 35 Rem.  I used a 45/70 Mod 1895 SS and it was a well respected stopper too.   

Offline Sitka_Blacktail

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #31 on: March 28, 2017, 09:36:56 AM »
They will all work if you hit them right. Many old time Alaskans used 30-30s and other assorted smaller calibers for bears including brownies. I have even heard of "old timers" using .22s but I wouldn't recommend it.

.375 is a popular caliber there now.
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Offline 1972Pinto

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #32 on: March 28, 2017, 02:04:35 PM »
My dad uses his savage 110 30-06, not being a very good tracker, he has always opted toward heavy bullets. So he bought 2 cases of 220 grain corelokts and he's used them ever sense. For deer, bear, coyotes, and even a couple grouse :chuckle: I know bears are tough but I don't think they're THAT tough. But then again, I saw a 250 pound bear shot with a 12 gauge 3" slug and he ran almost 100 yards up hill before he kicked the bucket

Offline Machias

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #33 on: March 28, 2017, 02:11:26 PM »
I don't want to start a big ol debate, but just my not so humble opinion, lots of wounded bears are from guys shooting too far at an animal that has an outline and body features that are hard to tell even at close range.  Plus the whole going to break them down mentality.  You take out both lungs and that bear is NOT going to go very far.  My opinion, bears are easy to kill, as long as you take out BOTH lungs.  Their movements and lack of features makes guys "think" they are breaking down a shoulder and they are not.  So many guys try to shoot punishing rounds and can't shoot them accurately so they have marginal hits.  Marginal hits on a bear is most likely a lost bear.  Caliber?  Whatever you can shoot effectively and actually place the bullet where it needs to be. 
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Offline JDHasty

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #34 on: March 28, 2017, 03:16:37 PM »
My dad uses his savage 110 30-06, not being a very good tracker, he has always opted toward heavy bullets. So he bought 2 cases of 220 grain corelokts and he's used them ever sense. For deer, bear, coyotes, and even a couple grouse :chuckle: I know bears are tough but I don't think they're THAT tough. But then again, I saw a 250 pound bear shot with a 12 gauge 3" slug and he ran almost 100 yards up hill before he kicked the bucket

I tried to mash 'em. 

I shot a 200 lb black bear through the heart and it spun 180 degrees, and took off down the trail it was on for ~25 yards, took a 90 degree right turn and went another 50 yards and all traces of blood disappeared.  This left me standing there scratching my head and wondering.  The trail went right along the left side of a five foot diameter Douglas fir dead fall and so after a bit I says to my self:  self, do you think that bear sprung over the tree and landed on the far side?  Only one way to find out, so I pulled myself up to climb over and there was another trail heading away from  the tree and it looked like someone had walked down it slinging red paint everywhere.  So I jumped down and followed the trail about 40 yards around a bend  and there was the bear lying there dead, with leaves and other forest floor matter pushed up in front of it's face and it's back legs up under it. 

The bear had squeezed through a hole under the tree trunk the size of which you could probably barely push a basketball through. 

After that day I wanted a shoulder if I could get one either before or after taking both lungs out.  I will also say that I helped other hunters hack our way into bear that had both lungs blown to atoms and had run a hundred yards into a blackberry tangle that made getting them out of there a terrible ten hours of hell experience. 
« Last Edit: March 28, 2017, 03:46:37 PM by JDHasty »

Offline pashok23

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #35 on: March 28, 2017, 03:39:18 PM »
First 2 bears i shot with .270 130gr and the last year i shot with .300WM 185gr at 530 yards .I dont think i could of shot last bear with .270 cal at that range.I kept doing a few follow up shots at over 600 yards.So my bear rifle is .300 WM

Offline Ridgeratt

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #36 on: March 28, 2017, 07:10:36 PM »
I don't want to start a big ol debate, but just my not so humble opinion, lots of wounded bears are from guys shooting too far at an animal that has an outline and body features that are hard to tell even at close range.  Plus the whole going to break them down mentality.  You take out both lungs and that bear is NOT going to go very far.  My opinion, bears are easy to kill, as long as you take out BOTH lungs.  Their movements and lack of features makes guys "think" they are breaking down a shoulder and they are not.  So many guys try to shoot punishing rounds and can't shoot them accurately so they have marginal hits.  Marginal hits on a bear is most likely a lost bear.  Caliber?  Whatever you can shoot effectively and actually place the bullet where it needs to be.


You sir have spoken with wisdom of experience!

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #37 on: March 28, 2017, 09:38:44 PM »
Preface my comment to say I have been in on the harvest of many bears. Seen them shot with many calibers and bullets placed in many placed. Yes, lung shot bears will die. Sometimes on the spot, sometimes they have run a long way. Typical bear country is right cover, so my thinking is bigger caliber and break them down on the spot. Some may say bears aren't built any sturdier then a deer, and that may be almost true comaring a 150# deer to a #150 bear. But a #250 old mulie buck is nothing compared, none wise, to a #450 bear. Break the shoulder down. Dead bear on the spot 100% of the time👍
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Offline Machias

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #38 on: March 28, 2017, 10:09:10 PM »
Average bear in WA is 140-150 pounds.  450 pound bear in WA is like 7 foot 6 inch man, sure they are out there, but they are few and far between.  Not arguing and your logic is solid.  The problem comes from guys "thinking" they are breaking down a shoulder, particularly at long range using weapons they cannot shoot with pinpoint accuracy.
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Offline Alchase

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #39 on: March 28, 2017, 10:27:11 PM »
I don't want to start a big ol debate, but just my not so humble opinion, lots of wounded bears are from guys shooting too far at an animal that has an outline and body features that are hard to tell even at close range.  Plus the whole going to break them down mentality.  You take out both lungs and that bear is NOT going to go very far.  My opinion, bears are easy to kill, as long as you take out BOTH lungs.  Their movements and lack of features makes guys "think" they are breaking down a shoulder and they are not.  So many guys try to shoot punishing rounds and can't shoot them accurately so they have marginal hits.  Marginal hits on a bear is most likely a lost bear.  Caliber?  Whatever you can shoot effectively and actually place the bullet where it needs to be. 

I would agree with this, I came across an exception that scared the crap out of me at 17. I was hunting elk near Ilwako in the 70's. I was sitting on a ridge finger, when I heard multiple shots coming from a clearing about 400 yards away. I made my way down to the clearing and there was an elderly gentleman in his 60s, sitting on a log who had obviously been chain smoking cigarette after cigarette, trying to recover his composer. The ground around the small clearing was total devastation! The underbrush had been ripped up and thrown in up the trees, and the small alders within the clearing had been knocked down or bitten through.
I asked "what happened?" he said he shot the bear from about 30 yards. He said his first shot was a hit, the next shots all missed. In the couple minutes it took to die, it completely tore up the surroundings in a huge circle, attacking everything within reach. 
When gutting, we noticed the bear's heart was gone. It his first shot been a perfect heart shot.
In the two minutes it took to die, the bear caused havoc on everything in reach. This bear was 140 lbs (guessing) not a big bear, yet the damage he caused in the last two minutes of life, was freaky.
He was so freaked out how lucky he was that the bear did not see him in its death throws, he had tears coming down his face.

I know this is not normal behavior for a bear, I learned a new respect for how tough bears can be that day.
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Offline ghosthunter

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #40 on: March 28, 2017, 10:46:26 PM »
So this thread is conderdicking what I have read.

Most what I have read says wait on broadside shots until the fron leg is foreword.
But many here are saying hit the shoulder straight through.

What's the vote?
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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #41 on: March 28, 2017, 11:06:49 PM »
Front leg forward when archery hunting PERIOD.
Shoulder with suitable caliber the rest..
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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #42 on: March 28, 2017, 11:08:38 PM »
Average bear in WA is 140-150 pounds.  450 pound bear in WA is like 7 foot 6 inch man, sure they are out there, but they are few and far between.  Not arguing and your logic is solid.  The problem comes from guys "thinking" they are breaking down a shoulder, particularly at long range using weapons they cannot shoot with pinpoint accuracy.
yes, of course assuming an accurate shot..
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Offline JDHasty

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #43 on: March 29, 2017, 05:43:20 AM »
I don't want to start a big ol debate, but just my not so humble opinion, lots of wounded bears are from guys shooting too far at an animal that has an outline and body features that are hard to tell even at close range.  Plus the whole going to break them down mentality.  You take out both lungs and that bear is NOT going to go very far.  My opinion, bears are easy to kill, as long as you take out BOTH lungs.  Their movements and lack of features makes guys "think" they are breaking down a shoulder and they are not.  So many guys try to shoot punishing rounds and can't shoot them accurately so they have marginal hits.  Marginal hits on a bear is most likely a lost bear.  Caliber?  Whatever you can shoot effectively and actually place the bullet where it needs to be. 

I would agree with this, I came across an exception that scared the crap out of me at 17. I was hunting elk near Ilwako in the 70's. I was sitting on a ridge finger, when I heard multiple shots coming from a clearing about 400 yards away. I made my way down to the clearing and there was an elderly gentleman in his 60s, sitting on a log who had obviously been chain smoking cigarette after cigarette, trying to recover his composer. The ground around the small clearing was total devastation! The underbrush had been ripped up and thrown in up the trees, and the small alders within the clearing had been knocked down or bitten through.
I asked "what happened?" he said he shot the bear from about 30 yards. He said his first shot was a hit, the next shots all missed. In the couple minutes it took to die, it completely tore up the surroundings in a huge circle, attacking everything within reach. 
When gutting, we noticed the bear's heart was gone. It his first shot been a perfect heart shot.
In the two minutes it took to die, the bear caused havoc on everything in reach. This bear was 140 lbs (guessing) not a big bear, yet the damage he caused in the last two minutes of life, was freaky.
He was so freaked out how lucky he was that the bear did not see him in its death throws, he had tears coming down his face.

I know this is not normal behavior for a bear, I learned a new respect for how tough bears can be that day.

A friend was shook like a rag doll by a dying bear that got him by the pants leg.  Had his knee not slipped out of it's mouth it would have been bad.  As it was, it didn't do him any good.  He was bruised up pretty bad. 

Offline 1972Pinto

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Re: "Bear calibers"
« Reply #44 on: March 29, 2017, 08:42:42 PM »
Now THAT would change the way I do things! Being that I've never seen a cougar in the wild and only seen 4 bears I don't carry a sidearm. However now I might!! :chuckle:

 


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