Farmer72
Member
If you are comfortable with your 300 WM i would take it. I dont own a 300 WM so I would probably take my 8mm Rem mag as I am very comfortable with it. If you wanted to take me with you I will let you use my 416 Rigby though.
Nice comment!!!!If you are comfortable with your 300 WM i would take it. I dont own a 300 WM so I would probably take my 8mm Rem mag as I am very comfortable with it. If you wanted to take me with you I will let you use my 416 Rigby though.
Pretty much any guide that gets up before me, saddles the horses, and cooks my breakfast is alright with me. I have never hunted with a guide. Too old to hunt with one now. I have always thought of a guide as someone that gets me to the area holding the animal I am paying to shoot and then helps me get the animal out. I have never wanted a guide to find my animal, and especially put one of his bullets into my animal. No, other than big ticked-off boar hogs, I have never hunted "dangerous" animals. My desire to find and kill my own animal is one of the things that kept me from hiring a guide back when I could have hunted by myself. But I only wanted a limited amount of help.What's my life worth?To you?
25k?!
If a bear gets shot. Goes into the alders. I'm not sending you in. I'm going in. Your staying out. 2 reasons. 1st your safety is paramount to me and my outfitter.
2nd is I do not have to worry about you or the noise created. Meaning if you are not there and I hear a noise I know it's the bear. No second guessing. And I am going to put the finishing shots in it anyways. So I have a difficult time understanding shooting sooner after the initial shot/shots by the hunter vs. me shooting later in the above described scenario ?
I absolutely agree with you. I personally will never go on a guided hunt other than the hunts I've guided myself. I am perfectly comfortable and confident in my ownhunting abilities and yes some hair raising and awsome stories but i never believed in trash talking my bosses clients because they had not the hunting experience i didPretty much any guide that gets up before me, saddles the horses, and cooks my breakfast is alright with me. I have never hunted with a guide. Too old to hunt with one now. I have always thought of a guide as someone that gets me to the area holding the animal I am paying to shoot and then helps me get the animal out. I have never wanted a guide to find my animal, and especially put one of his bullets into my animal. No, other than big ticked-off boar hogs, I have never hunted "dangerous" animals. My desire to find and kill my own animal is one of the things that kept me from hiring a guide back when I could have hunted by myself. But I only wanted a limited amount of help.
Nothing against guides, just prefer to do some things for myself. Someone on this thread said he would not want to be a guide for a man like me. I agree. I would not want him as a guide either. I have talked with several guides over the years and my safety was always their first concern. I have never talked to a brown bear guide that wanted to do things my way. While I understand their reasoning, I had to pass. My beliefs and my unlucky dreams of hunting a brown/grizzly bear have kept that rug elusive to me.
One last thing. I have heard guides talking after the hunt, and they mostly talked about the elk, deer, black bear, they found and how stupid their clients acted when faced with the possibility of shooting at a real trophy animal. I don't think my guide would talk like that while I was still in camp or at the local restaurant, but I do know that lots of guides take credit for the animals they find for their clients, even though they never fire a shot. That bothers me. Then again, guides do have some really fine hunting stories.
Great advise, that's a great take...!Your 300 is just fine providing it is ultra reliable and durable. It should fit you like a fine shotgun and don't hang a lot of crap
on it that will hang up in the alders.....ammo pouches etc. If it's got a floor plate, glue it shut or duct tape it. Your scope cover should be easy and water tight. Years back, we used pieces of inner tube stretched over the scope.....harder to find today. Now I go to a physical therapist friend and get a piece of .....I think it's called Theraband or some such....your bullet choice is good.
Good luck on your hunt.....Where will it take place?
Have you seen the Revenant ?Just do it
Like Nike states
Hunt Like the real mountain men. Hawkins .50 caliber muzzle loader flint lock. 300 grain bullet with 150 grains of black powder with a Bowie for back up. That rifle and load is more than enough to take a Brown. Give the bear a chance.
Alot do carry them yes i myself always had my 4570 marlin and my sw50 under my armpitThe 375 is what most guides carry which probably will tell you something. I have a 2nd cousin who lives in AK back country and he has 2. One leaning by front door and one at back door. Hoping to visit someday. I won't have to bring one!
Nice mountIf you do decide to go for a new rifle I'll throw a plug out there for the Kimber Talkeetna. It's as purpose built a rifle for Alaska bear hunting as you can find. Fantastic stock, stainless everything and some very fine ghost ring sights from NECG ( just in case you fall on the wet grass and crack an objective, we call it snot grass because that's how slick it is!).
I really enjoy it and the .375 is just not that bad recoil wise, I liken it more to a shotgun than a sharp smack like a 300.
That being said, I ended up taking my brownie on the kenai peninsula with an 06 pushing a 168 woodleigh. Only needed one and he rolled down the hill.
then the work begins!!
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Now that was the best response. We will definitely save your responseHave you seen the Revenant ?