RH300UM
Well-Known Member
Have you hunted a Alaskan Bear? Guided?^^^^^^
Curious about this... How common for the guides in your outfit to open fire after the client's first bullet hits home? Do you give the bear some time to expire if the hit look's solid?Have you hunted a Alaskan Bear? Guided?^^^^^^
Congratulations on the hunt, there is nothing like it. Your gun is fine.Do not know where yet but will attend several sport shows to get a read on guide and service face to face if possible. We be quite disappointed if a guide opened up on a bear that I hit well. Might end up on one of those boat hunts in the ABC s . Do not need a 10 footer but a nice representative animal and a great adventure would be a winner. Will be looking at the peninsula also.
.375 Ruger Guide Gun. Great bear medicine in a short action cartridge. .338 WM or .340 Weatherby would be a good second choice. I've heard some African calibers are great, but expensive.Planning on a once in a lifetime brown bear Alaskan hunt in a couple years. Have a 300 Win Mag that shoots 220 Nosler partitions and 200 Nosler partitions quite well. Don't really want to buy another rifle but should I move up to a 338 class? Thinking of either a 33 Nosler, 338 WM or 338 ultra??? Opinions???
If a guide put a bullet in my bear, or any other animal I paid to shoot, that guide better have a tag for that species. I don't need to hear about all the times a guide or a PH saved a client from an animal. I know it is their duty to save my life, but other than that, he best keep his rifle pointed somewhere other than at my animal. If the animal wins, then I should have been better or brought more gun. And if he does save my useless carcuss, it will be more to save his license and a big investigation. Just thinking out loud!
Every hunt,Hunter is differentCurious about this... How common for the guides in your outfit to open fire after the client's first bullet hits home? Do you give the bear some time to expire if the hit look's solid?
What's my life worth?To you?I think guides feel a need to finish bears simply because once out of sight, a wounded bear becomes the hunter , a hunter with a big ol chip on its shoulder. I'm with most on here though, if i paid to hunt and kill ANY animal , i want the job all by myself . An animal finished by someone else isn't my kill in my mind. With big bears or cape buffs, the line does get a little blurry though . Tough call to have to make as a guide , im sure.
If you are going to buy a rifle specifically for this hunt i would suggest the only cartridge ever made specifically for large dangerous bears (griz) 378 Weatherby mag.!. If this will be a guided hunt there will be no reason to put a scope on it becase we never ever let a hunter shoot an animal that was more than 150 yards away period the end good luck and never hunt dangerous game with a semi autoPlanning on a once in a lifetime brown bear Alaskan hunt in a couple years. Have a 300 Win Mag that shoots 220 Nosler partitions and 200 Nosler partitions quite well. Don't really want to buy another rifle but should I move up to a 338 class? Thinking of either a 33 Nosler, 338 WM or 338 ultra??? Opinions???
I'd want to shoot and kill my own bear, rather than having my guide kill it with his 375, after my first hit, or two
375 and bears are almost part of the same sentence. Mixed bag says the others. It's a bear trip, get a pure bear rifle if you can.
but feel certain the guide was plugging it too, since it came at them. And they commonly carry .375s.
The 375 is what most guides carry
Experiences and conclusions among guides vary. The one I knew closest after his career was over opined that the .375's were a good client rifle,
further extrapolated to .375. The bigger the bear - the bigger the gun recommended
When I lived up there all my buddies doing a Kodiak hunt seemed to swear by taking a 375 with them. As
Take your 300 win mag and don't be surprised after your first shot the guide will hammer the bear with the 375
The guide followed up immediately behind my shot with his 375 and knocked the bear down.
My 2 cents as a AK guide is
Prepare yourself mentally is the biggest factor. Your rifle choice is important, yes. It's the delivery tool and needs consideration. 375 is what I tell hunters to consider. If not it's not the end of the world. Good bullet construction is always paramount.
If I would ever get a chance to go for brown bear I would take my 375 H & H , 270 gr Hornady or 300 Swift A-frame.
shoot benchrest with an old Alaskan Guide.
We have talked kodiak hunts into the wee hours.
He would tell you, 375
We never hunted big bear but did take 4 of them when they came around the house. Generally that was about 1 each year. The 375 did a much better job than the 30-338 we had. Recoil is very manageable. Just my 2 cents.
At least some of the advice is coming from people with experience shooting big bears. Most of the advice is from arm chair experts. I have shot or seen shot grizzly with a 300, browns with 338 and 375 and polar bears with 358 Norma and 375. I tell you with absolute confidence that a 375 was far superior in safe and humane kill power. That 338 on an 11' 4" bear really made him angry. Once they are fired up they get super power ability to absorb bullets and keep going - or coming. That bear closed ground on us fast as the 338 emptied. Thankfully, the 375 anchored him. The only big bear rifle I carry is a 375. By buddy bought a 416! Long range isn't for dangerous game, and often reloads aren't allowed.
I am not going to Voice a personal opinion. I've never hunted big browns. I live on the East Coast ( as I believe you do also.) where we have black bears. That's not even in the same category. Not even close. As I read through the comments I thought there was a definite pattern. I just thought I'd point that out.If you are going to buy a rifle specifically for this hunt i would suggest the only cartridge ever made specifically for large dangerous bears (griz) 378 Weatherby mag.!. If this will be a guided hunt there will be no reason to put a scope on it becase we never ever let a hunter shoot an animal that was more than 150 yards away period the end good luck and never hunt dangerous game with a semi auto