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TheFirearmsForum.com
FOUNDED: February 9, 2001 |
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#1 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Fort Pierce Fl
Posts: 556
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I was at GM today buying ammo and the prices I saw made me get Lyman 49th. AT over a dollar a round for 30.carbine if I what to shoot and get ahead on it,the only way I can do it is to start reloading my own.
I learn by doing and reading so I may be posting a few questions. Steve
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#2 |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Northeast Georgia
Contributor
Posts: 6,319
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You started out right. Getting a copy of a reloading manual was the first step and I always recommend that one. Read the book then ask away.
__________________
NRA Endowment Member GeorgiaCarry.Org Member Retired US Army Postal Worker Personally, I carry a gun because I'm too young to die and too old to take an ass whoopin'.....author unknown (but obviously brilliant)
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#3 |
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*TFF Moderator/Host*
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Heart Of Texas
Contributor
Posts: 17,308
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Yep, read it thru then read it thru again.
Welcome to the wonderful addiction of handloading. ![]()
__________________
It takes 43 muscles to frown, 17 to smile, and 3 for proper trigger squeeze. The latest caliber or gear is no substitute for experience and skill. Rifles and cartridges don't make hits -- shooters do. Fact of life: After Monday and Tuesday, even the calendar says WTF!
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#4 |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: UK
Posts: 3,163
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If there's someone near you that reloads get their input. This forum has a tremendous amount of freely given expertise.
When getting started reloading it's better to ask lots of questions than guess wrong. |
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#5 |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Upper Yukon, Alaska
Posts: 1,813
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All the lead talk over last couple weeks, nothing would surprise me. Might be a back door attack on fmj's too. I mostly use Barnes & Hornady anyway, but I'm still a long time believer in Nosler Partitions (boy have they went up in price) so I always add 2-3 hundred noslers in every order I make. At least I have the comfort in knowing my grandkids will still be killin moose & caribou with the bullets I bought before they were born.
Blk Eag, that CED chrono finally came in on mail plane. Nice dvd explaining everything too. I'm not even foolin around with it until she warms up in May. I got up this morn, at 6am, it was minus 22 F. And you live as close to the arctic circle as I do, ha ha. I bet caribou do just fine in those Islands you mentioned, livin off the moss & lichen. |
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#6 | |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: UK
Posts: 3,163
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Quote:
I actually live on the mainland of Scotland; just have family and friends in Shetland that I get up to visit from time to time. Caribou?? in Shetland? the largest animals there are cattle and Shetland ponies. Not much moss and lichen there; only heather and peatmoss. Lots of sheep, rabbits and seals, and some otters. That Gulf Stream has kept us in a nice warm water bath this winter. Of course it doesn't get very hot in the summer either. Scotland has some deer. The first one I saw, I thouht it was a greyhound. There are some areas they are becoming enough of a problem that the local government is talking about a cull. Of course the bambi huggers protest and can't understand things like overpopulation and overgrazing. A number of guys in my gun club manage the deer population for estates in this region. They sell the meat to hotels and restaurants. Last edited by BlackEagle; 03-16-2012 at 10:26 PM.. |
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#7 |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Upper Yukon, Alaska
Posts: 1,813
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I'll never have enough bullets piled up in boxes on the bench shelves; have 80 some little boxes now; need a couple hundred to believe my grandkids be well supplied.
Here in rural Alaska, when the caribou show up (around late July-August) on their annual migration into Canada; even the greenies (we got them here in Alaska too, German Socialists that I always tell that if life was so good back in Germany with govt giving them everything; why don't they head on back, ha ha. Once at a school board meeting, this kooky German lady was saying that in Germany the fat people pay more than the skinny people, taxes and such, and I told her in USA you work hard and get fat. Then I told her she was one the Russkies didn't get and she stormed outta the school, got to just luv the greenies) want to get some meat put up. I think they saw the noble Indians shooting a bunch and figured it must be spiritually acceptable. Ya know how Indians think, no limits, you keep shooting until outta ammo or caribou; creator takes care of management issues, not man's domain. Then us White People arrived here and we either over populated or are better shots. It just don't work out as good for the caribou over the long term with license & state F&G limits, but has to be that way for us Whites or wouldn't be any bou for anybody. Funny thing about them greenies is they ain't natural born hunters. I see them when there's literally thousands of caribou wandering aimlessly and they hardly ever get any, no joke. I've seen them sit by fire along road waiting for bou to cross for days at a time. Then, I'll be with some of the local Indians and we'll be on our way back down off the summit in my crew cab filled with caribou hanging over the side boards and they'll just look; they hadn't seen a one, quite the harr. We always drop caribou off at elders & old folks cabins so they have fresh meat. Ya, them greenies, they think they know so much about nature don't they; but they'll be the first to fall by the wayside and become statistics if it ever gets to be hungry country out there. I'd hate to have a hard landing with one of them and be stuck 100 miles from anywheres; maybe I'd have to eat them, ha ha. What's everybody use as far as calibers in Scotland for deer and do you have stag there too? Have a good weekend B. E. |
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#8 | |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: UK
Posts: 3,163
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Hi Zhurh;
I was talking to some of the guys at the club, (I don't have police permission to hunt yet. It's more complicated than I want to get involved in right now. ) Their input:.308 is a fairly universal caliber, although for Roe deer (that weigh in at around 70 lbs.) the rules say you can use .222 or .223. For anything larger the caliber needs to be at least .240. They were saying that a .30-30 won't qualify for legal deer hunting in Scotland. The British Association of Shooting and Conservation has some of the legal guidelines http://www.basc.org.uk/en/codes-of-p...r-stalking.cfm (Scotland, England, Ireland and Wales all have different requirements)... and a link to Best Practice Guides: http://www.bestpracticeguides.org.uk...ms_rifles.aspx Quote:
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