Looks like a nice H&H Royal .Agreed on using a double when possible! I always take one with me when bear hunting.
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Looks like a nice H&H Royal .Agreed on using a double when possible! I always take one with me when bear hunting.
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Looks like a nice H&H RoyalAgreed on using a double when possible! I always take one with me when bear hunting.
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Thanks Matt for your post. It allows me to ask this question of the forum.This thread makes me want to take my double out to hunt deer or bear! The thing that has always stopped me in the past has been the rain. It's almost always raining during modern season here.
-Matt
That is an interesting quandary. I guess the smart thing would be to get the extra K gun barrels, but then if something in your action breaks you are completely out of business. If you had an entire extra rifle in 9.3x74 at least you could still hunt. That is a tough one.
I don’t own a double yet. But I have hunted coastal brown bears in Alaska. My hunt was tent based and it rained and rained and rained. But some days it just poured. I used a Blaser R8. It held up well. I would not take a timber stocked blued steel rifle if I was worried about its looks.Thanks Matt for your post. It allows me to ask this question of the forum.
I am interested in taking my VC 470 to Alaska to hunt coastal Brown bears. What are suggestions from the forum for protecting a traditional wood and steel rifle in such an environment?
Thanks Matt for your post. It allows me to ask this question of the forum.
I am interested in taking my VC 470 to Alaska to hunt coastal Brown bears. What are suggestions from the forum for protecting a traditional wood and steel rifle in such an environment?
I don’t own a double yet. But I have hunted coastal brown bears in Alaska. My hunt was tent based and it rained and rained and rained. But some days it just poured. I used a Blaser R8. It held up well. I would not take a timber stocked blued steel rifle if I was worried about its looks.
Dragging a heavy rifle up and down mountains, through alders, trying to keep it dry and away from the occasional salt spray would be a rather character building experience. The last thing I’d want to do at night is worry about trying to dry out my rifle. My Blaser didn’t even get to sniff an oily rag on the trip. The synthetic stock survived with only a few extra beauty marks. The metal work remains unblemished.
IMO would and steel and the Alaskan coast do not go together.
Absolutely. $5.89 for a six pack of tall boys at the local quick mart. Every dollar counts when you're saving for that next huntHamms?!?
But that doesn't even qualify as beerAbsolutely. $5.89 for a six pack of tall boys at the local quick mart. Every dollar counts when you're saving for that next hunt