Hunter-Habib
AH legend
My Churchill Gunmakers Model Deluxe 7x57mm Mauser
A Heym Jumbo .600 Nitro Express
A Beretta Model 626E 12 Gauge 3” Magnum
A Heym Jumbo .600 Nitro Express
A Beretta Model 626E 12 Gauge 3” Magnum
Having answered a question on favorite cartridges differently, I have to admit that these are not my favorite combination - they would rather make up the most useful combination in my battery. My favorites are a Mossberg .22LR, a Winchester .30-30 and a Remington 870 in 20 gauge. Those are the guns in my battery that see the most use.I have a CZ 557 in .30-06 and a CZ 550 in .375 H&H. I would add a plain pump action 12 gauge chambered for 2 3/4 or 3 inch with screw in chokes.
Savage model 24. I own 3 in .22/410, .22/20 and .357/20. The model 24 is not made anymore but there are always plenty of them on Gunbroker but the prices have been going up.
Savage currently makes a plastic combo thing called the model 42 in.22/410 and .22 mag/410 iirc. I handled one and was not in the least impressed with it. Other folks will probably be perfectly happy with it.
Chiappa makes the Double Badger with a rimfire barrel over .410 but I have no experience with them.
Not getting into the ethics swamp, but this will only work if you have exclusive access to the property or travel system that gets you to the animal within a minute or two- otherwise someone will have the animal tagged, gutted and being moved to their camp by the time you get there.12.7x99
The 12.7 would be a Barrett semi auto to take game at 2 miles
Off topic, but back in my LE days, I once served out of county felony summonses for robbery to a father and his son, who had gone to another elk camp with their rifles and took back an elk that they stated they had shot but was tagged by another hunter and taken to his camp. Nothing like taking the law into your own hands over an elk. Unbelievable!Not getting into the ethics swamp, but this will only work if you have exclusive access to the property or travel system that gets you to the animal within a minute or two- otherwise someone will have the animal tagged, gutted and being moved to their camp by the time you get there.
I think the most cost effective way, would be for the long distance shooter to have a "forward observer" several hundred yards out from his shooting position. The observer could then race to the animal and tag it via GPS coordinates sent to him by the shooter from his satellite phone after the kill site was "painted" by the laser on his 250x spotting scope?the recent posts give an idea- a remote control drone with sufficient lift capability to pick-up a 600 pound animal and transport it a mile or two. thus someone could shoot an animal at great distance. Send the drone out to retrieve the animal and drop it at a location where it could be dressed and moved without any of that old-school stuff of sectioning and backpacking it over hill and blowdown.
@Ray Bthe recent posts give an idea- a remote control drone with sufficient lift capability to pick-up a 600 pound animal and transport it a mile or two. thus someone could shoot an animal at great distance. Send the drone out to retrieve the animal and drop it at a location where it could be dressed and moved without any of that old-school stuff of sectioning and backpacking it over hill and blowdown.