LOL w/ P.Office. Todays mail contained a Christmas card mailed day after Thanksgiving. Wish ya lots of luck W/ new rifle...oldwood
I used to tell the fellows that if they couldn’t pack a 9# rifle maybe they should devote some time to an exercise program... the conceit of youth. Now in my golden years I know that no amount of time in the gym can compensate for the injuries, the wear and tear, the inevitable march of time... I’m 74, still hunt alone quite often, (my wife swears I’ll die out there alone... Doesn’t seem such a bad end to me.) my favorite area is almost 2-1/2 miles from the trailhead and nearly 3000’ up and these days it takes a lot longer to go in and come out. Someday that may be all I get done in a days hunt.Fyi, I am thinking about using a .45 percussion Kentucky for a bull elk this year, but I will be using a conical of some sort. Just like the idea of a lighter gun to pack around. That is if the post office ever delivers it!
Walk
Maybe ask Tom if he can copy Lewis’ .45-340I bullet for your .40. If I don’t beat you to the punch... I suspect it would come in around 285 grains or so and with the wide flat profile, be an absolute hammer on deer sized critters loaded about like a .40-60 Marlin. A slightly more powerful .38-55.Whenever these caliber vs. caliber discussions come up as threads, the underlying truth that must be addressed from an individual hunter's perspective is, "How do I define hunting?"
Each of us has a somewhat different definition of the word "hunting", depending upon the EXACT CIRCUMSTANCES that occured as our ethics were defined by our teachers, our life's hunting circumstances, and the way WE CHOSE to ethically react to each set of circumstances as they occured when WE FOUND OURSELVES ALONE, AND REQUIRED TO REACT to a particular situation.
As any firearms enthusiast knows, the smallest calibers are capable of killing deer-sized game, IF USED WITHIN THE BALLISTIC PARAMETERS OF THE CARTRIDGE/ M-L CALIBER.
Yet, in every single thread of this type that I can recall reading, blanket statements are constantly being thrown about calibers suitable for mule deer vs. whitetail deer, .40 caliber vs. .45 caliber vs. .50 caliber vs. .54 caliber.
When I return to the hunting fields, if a shoulder-fired weapon is to be in the mix, it will HAVE TO BE a .40 caliber rifle with a wide buttplate. My steadily increasing osteoarthritis, and my PCP have dictated that any return to rifle shooting be in a very low recoiling caliber. As well as switching constantly back, and forth, from shoulder-to-shoulder to distribute the recoil as evenly as possible between both sides of my body. As well as a shooting vest with recoil absorbing pads for both shoulders.
This means that an accurate pair of range finding binoculars will HAVE TO BE PURCHASED, and utilized to determine the range, before pulling the trigger.
A custom rifled Spanish Escopeta (patilla flintlock) with one of Colerain's, gain twist rifled, 1:36" twist at the muzzle, A-weight, 38" long, American pattern, octagon-round barrels in .40 caliber that will allow me to utilize either patched balls, or grease-groove bullets on top of an over-bore-sized wool wad.
I will be looking for a rifle with an all up weight of no more than 7 pounds. The closer to 6 pounds my gunmaker can get the weight, the better. With a .40 caliber, 200-250 grain, grease-groove bullet (Accurate Molds), modeled loosely on a Lee R.E.A.L. bullet (tapered bullet, with tapered bands), such a rifle will be capable of hunting everything from squirrels to black bear.
We all recognize that the .45 is plenty to kill a deer under the right conditions, but I greatly prefer a .50 and then greatly prefer a .54 over that. That said, because I have a couple of .45s and like to use all of my rifles to make game, I use the .45 for big, PA whitetails. And that said, I really, really try to do so only under ideal conditions with tracking snow and I'm more inclined to seriously limit my shots if I don't have tracking snow (or sometimes even if I do). The problem that I have with your question is that I've never hunted out west and have never hunted mulies, so I don't really know what you're stuck with as far as tracking conditions. I think with a dusting of snow or other reasonable tracking conditions that the .45 is OK, but I think you'd be better served with a .50, .54 or larger. Just my opinion and we all have one.
I will be using a .45 for our late flintlock season in PA this year because I have a rifle that I recently obtained that I haven't harvested a deer with. Fortunately, we have snow on the ground and it looks like it's likely to hang around.
A .54 with the usual length and diameter barrel is lighter than a .45 with the same barrel, but a conical changes the whole picture of course when talking about killing power.
I have killed mule deer and whitetails with prb muzzleloaders and with archery equipment. I never ever needed a "finishing shot" with my bow, but I have needed one with a muzzleloader several times. I would like to hear other ml hunters experience with that.
Just saying it's better to have a little overkill than a little underkill, and if you've ever lost a nice buck, or any other animal, I'm sure you will have to agree with that.
My first muzzleloader was a Hopkins Allan underhamer 45cal I've shot lots of mule deer at 100yrds 60 grains FFF PRB was a great combinationI use a 45 on mule deer but I am using a 409 gr bullet. I would never use a 45 PRB for mule deer.
Although Lewis and Clark carried .54 or maybe a .49 and their .69, the rifles that went west started out as the .50 and below that, as time went on bigger rifles came to be the norm.I think that if you were to ask a real mountain man what he thought about it, he would say something like "why in the heck would you use a .45 when you have a .54".
I used to tell the fellows that if they couldn’t pack a 9# rifle maybe they should devote some time to an exercise program... the conceit of youth. Now in my golden years I know that no amount of time in the gym can compensate for the injuries, the wear and tear, the inevitable march of time... I’m 74, still hunt alone quite often, (my wife swears I’ll die out there alone... Doesn’t seem such a bad end to me.) my favorite area is almost 2-1/2 miles from the trailhead and nearly 3000’ up and these days it takes a lot longer to go in and come out. Someday that may be all I get done in a days hunt.
Long story longer, I appreciate the lighter rifles too... gotta carry them all day, only shooting once. I hope.
As said above, a well placed .45 RB within about 65 yards will through and through a deer. No problems at all. If you're a dead-eye, never miss, heartrate never gets above 65bpm like my old man you can do it just fine, as he does. He hunts deer with a .45 plains rifle and drops them time after time. All 65 yards and less. I use a .50, .54, and .58 myself and Pop's deer run no further than mine on average....
As your realtor says, "Location, location, location".
Trouble is, nobody always gets a a broadside, standing still shot, inside 65 yards, but that won't stop people from taking a shot. You can deride folks all day and all night, call them this and that, but it won't change a thing. It is what it is. Not good to give newbee's the idea that a .45 patched round ball going slingshot velocity is a deadly killing machine cause it just isn't, even in the hands of an experienced hunter.
Trouble is, nobody always gets a a broadside, standing still shot, inside 65 yards, but that won't stop people from taking a shot. You can deride folks all day and all night, call them this and that, but it won't change a thing. It is what it is. Not good to give newbee's the idea that a .45 patched round ball going slingshot velocity is a deadly killing machine cause it just isn't, even in the hands of an experienced hunter.
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