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Thread: Reloading 22 Hornet (The Original) – Optimal Canada Goose Load

  1. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by Oldbloke View Post
    Yep, some blokes wear out barrels trying achieve a level of accuracy that just isn't required.
    The costs just don't justify it.
    Trave l to range
    Pay range fee
    Bullets
    Powder
    Primers
    Your time
    Maybe. Depends what sort of kick you get out of reloading and spending time on the range. Also whether you are already successful in the field or not. If you only get to go hunting say a total of 7 to 10 days a year range time might be quite appealing. Maybe not so much chasing the last % of accuracy but certainly chasing knowledge of yourself and your firearm.

    A bit of a story for you. I have a mate shooting a 7mm08. He goes with someone else, very experienced, deer hunting a couple of times a year. Usually comes back with venison. He had never taken goat and wanted to try some for the table. Took him out, mature pine forest, put him out front on a ridge, came upon a pod of 15 goats the same time they saw him. Obviously well hunted they were on the move right smart. By the time he got prone, at around 30m, and emptied his mag, he had one itty-bitty kid to show for it. I was some 80m back down the heavily ridge with a good side view of the goats as they ran down a spur. Off the shoulder with my 7x57mm I took 2 on the run. One shoulder shot, one kidneys as it was disappearing behind some timber. 86m shots. He saw me take the shots. After the dust settled and we had bagged some meat he told me he had never shot from the shoulder, always prone, and had no idea how to or confidence to try.

    The short story is I got him to the range, starting with my Rossi Puma 357 and cheap 38sp , doing drills on 50m gongs from the shoulder. I got him to stand in his hunting ready position, either chamber loaded, safety on, bolt open or how he would normally be prepared to take a shot momentarily. I'd then call 'Ready, Standby, One, Two, Three, Four, Five". The scenario is an animal is about to walk into view, unaware of him and he has to go from his ready condition to firing condition and hit the gong before the five count. The count cadence is one second apart with 4 sec to hit the gong from the count of One.

    At the start at 50m he was shooting at around the count of Three and regularly missing more than he hit. A lot more. So rushing. After around 50 shots he was nailing it with ease around the Four count to just before the Five count.. then we moved to 100m. Then swapped the Rossi for his 7mm08. He was shooting factory ammo and at 100m by the end of a pkt and a half he was confidently nailing the gong dead centre.

    He took the remainder on his next hunt and came back with a couple of deer shot from the shoulder, around 80m and 120m. Chuffed as. Now of course he is keen on more range time, and reloading.

    There are lots of drills to do on the range. Yes you can go thru some ammo. But if you go hunting half a doz times a year, have some hunts where you don't fire a shot even, and others where one or two shots put meat on table or trophy on wall, you would hardly be building familiarity with your rifle. Range time is not hunting but it gives the confidence and knowledge to not have to think to much about what you need to do when the shot opportunity comes. And potentially saves you from wondering how the heck you could have missed. If I only had 100 rds of ammo I'd be prepared to use 90 of them on the range to maximise the chance of getting 10 killing shots in the field.

    Anyway, if range time is not your thing and you don't need it fair enough. A few of us do. It is a slippery slope tho. From hitting an 8" gong at 200m to a 4" at 600m is kinda like stepping on a steep Dunedin street coated with black ice. I've managed to avoid it so far...
    I know a lot but it seems less every day...

  2. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jhon View Post
    Maybe. Depends what sort of kick you get out of reloading and spending time on the range. Also whether you are already successful in the field or not. If you only get to go hunting say a total of 7 to 10 days a year range time might be quite appealing. Maybe not so much chasing the last % of accuracy but certainly chasing knowledge of yourself and your firearm.

    A bit of a story for you. I have a mate shooting a 7mm08. He goes with someone else, very experienced, deer hunting a couple of times a year. Usually comes back with venison. He had never taken goat and wanted to try some for the table. Took him out, mature pine forest, put him out front on a ridge, came upon a pod of 15 goats the same time they saw him. Obviously well hunted they were on the move right smart. By the time he got prone, at around 30m, and emptied his mag, he had one itty-bitty kid to show for it. I was some 80m back down the heavily ridge with a good side view of the goats as they ran down a spur. Off the shoulder with my 7x57mm I took 2 on the run. One shoulder shot, one kidneys as it was disappearing behind some timber. 86m shots. He saw me take the shots. After the dust settled and we had bagged some meat he told me he had never shot from the shoulder, always prone, and had no idea how to or confidence to try.

    The short story is I got him to the range, starting with my Rossi Puma 357 and cheap 38sp , doing drills on 50m gongs from the shoulder. I got him to stand in his hunting ready position, either chamber loaded, safety on, bolt open or how he would normally be prepared to take a shot momentarily. I'd then call 'Ready, Standby, One, Two, Three, Four, Five". The scenario is an animal is about to walk into view, unaware of him and he has to go from his ready condition to firing condition and hit the gong before the five count. The count cadence is one second apart with 4 sec to hit the gong from the count of One.

    At the start at 50m he was shooting at around the count of Three and regularly missing more than he hit. A lot more. So rushing. After around 50 shots he was nailing it with ease around the Four count to just before the Five count.. then we moved to 100m. Then swapped the Rossi for his 7mm08. He was shooting factory ammo and at 100m by the end of a pkt and a half he was confidently nailing the gong dead centre.

    He took the remainder on his next hunt and came back with a couple of deer shot from the shoulder, around 80m and 120m. Chuffed as. Now of course he is keen on more range time, and reloading.

    There are lots of drills to do on the range. Yes you can go thru some ammo. But if you go hunting half a doz times a year, have some hunts where you don't fire a shot even, and others where one or two shots put meat on table or trophy on wall, you would hardly be building familiarity with your rifle. Range time is not hunting but it gives the confidence and knowledge to not have to think to much about what you need to do when the shot opportunity comes. And potentially saves you from wondering how the heck you could have missed. If I only had 100 rds of ammo I'd be prepared to use 90 of them on the range to maximise the chance of getting 10 killing shots in the field.

    Anyway, if range time is not your thing and you don't need it fair enough. A few of us do. It is a slippery slope tho. From hitting an 8" gong at 200m to a 4" at 600m is kinda like stepping on a steep Dunedin street coated with black ice. I've managed to avoid it so far...
    They should have named high street to steep street. Apart from that I'm sorry but your man must be fkn simple never to have shouldered a rifle. Certainly would not go hunting with him, what did you say his name was, just so we can steer clear.

  3. #33
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    Nah smokey..that's a bit tough. No different to young fellas laying down n hugging themselves as that's all they know. We forget we once didn't know how to shoot either,we may have learnt about same time we started to walk but others didn't.
    75/15/10 black powder matters

  4. #34
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    What a dick thing to say. Another thing that is good practice for your mate if he has the place to do it is possum shooting. Sure some of it is pretty close range but its just about all off the shoulder shooting and it also helps with your muscle memory, and after a while it becomes automatic.
    Hugh Shields likes this.

  5. #35
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    Surely everyone has watched a western, John Wayne n all that. Off the shoulder, it's not rocket science.

  6. #36
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    Couple of hundred Canada geese in the neighbourhood today.
    Name:  IMG_4423.jpeg
Views: 213
Size:  2.12 MB
    Micky Duck and Hugh Shields like this.

  7. #37
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    @Quicknock is that the Awatea Lake, Paraparaumu.

  8. #38
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    That's the one @Hugh Shields
    Hugh Shields likes this.

  9. #39
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    @Quicknock I went around to the Awatea Lakes tonight after dark and walked around all the lakes. There were a lot of geese! I reckon they can be shot safety, but only from one or two angles, where there is a safe backdrop. The view I liked best was from the cast iron garden seat down by the edge of the lake, behind a house. There is a safe shooting corridor in a north-east direction where there are two dense rows of established forest. Who would be the best person to talk to to coordinate with the residents and KCDC? Private message me if you like or txt or call to discuss 021 9888 41

  10. #40
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    @Jhon I fully agree with your method of training.
    As I get more into this goose shooting lark, with center fire rifles, not shotguns, the more I realize rapid offhand shooting is essential.
    Basically with geese you get one shot, perhaps two off the bipod then all he'll breaks loss and they are moving and the shooter is moving fast to keep them in sight, whilst finding a gap between tree to squeeze off.
    This morning there were five geese on the grass and pond, I got all five with the 222 Remington. Only the first one was off the bipod.
    The type of shooting is exactly what we used to do in our 20's. Rows of tin cans off hand as fast as you could. We also used to roll tyres down the hill, with a piece of cardboard stuffed inside as a target. The shooter would be at right angles to the travel of the tyre and be armed with a pump action shotgun, lever action or bolt action 22.
    Perhaps that practice paid a dividend this morning

    .Name:  20240709_095412.jpg
Views: 216
Size:  4.55 MB

  11. #41
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    Sounds like an ar would be a handy tool. Where do these geese roost or do they roost? Would catching up with them that way get a few more?

  12. #42
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    @blip YES! A semi would be handy!
    Re Roosting. One farmer told me, "They roost in the branches of those pine trees," pointing up at the top of the highest ridge.
    I've never seen geese in the branches of trees, but would be interested if others have....
    At night the seem to congregate in large numbers on the ground of on ponds/lakes.
    Took this photo last night on Rimu Road, Paraparaumu, opposite PacNSave and right beside the Kapiti Coast District Council offices.
    Tricky to get a safe angle with solid background. There is a public walking/cycling pathway around the opposite side to the road. Not impossible though...Name:  20240709_183330.jpg
Views: 212
Size:  2.79 MB

  13. #43
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hugh Shields View Post
    @blip YES! A semi would be handy!
    Re Roosting. One farmer told me, "They roost in the branches of those pine trees," pointing up at the top of the highest ridge.
    I've never seen geese in the branches of trees, but would be interested if others have....
    At night the seem to congregate in large numbers on the ground of on ponds/lakes.
    Took this photo last night on Rimu Road, Paraparaumu, opposite PacNSave and right beside the Kapiti Coast District Council offices.
    Tricky to get a safe angle with solid background. There is a public walking/cycling pathway around the opposite side to the road. Not impossible though...Attachment 254496
    There's a pic on the forum shooting at nite and the projectile doing a Rick O Shay, a ghillie suit and a silenced air rifle strategically placed before dark is your friend.

  14. #44
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
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    That's the attraction of a shotgun... background/backstop becomes much less important. Semiauto...the wee17rimfire MIGHT be worth borrowing one to try??
    75/15/10 black powder matters

  15. #45
    Member Oldbloke's Avatar
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    Looks dodgy to me.
    Hugh Shields likes this.
    Hunt safe, look after the bush & plug more pests. The greatest invention in the history of man is beer.
    https://youtu.be/2v3QrUvYj-Y
    A bit more bang is better.

 

 

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