If you want to shoot dangerous game..

First, while using the rifle, the primer blew out of the case on a hot load and lodged in the space where the lug needs to go.
Second, they start running because the ridge was 20 feet in front of them and they would have no time to react once the bear came over the ridge. While running, the pistol falls out. When he realized that, they start looking around and just happened to see the handle of the pistol sticking out the snow.
Third, he misses the first shot which mean he had four left. On the last round he had, the bear changed direction. They heard it slide down the mountain and it died.

Absolutely wild.
Yeah everything went wrong aye... But I do not think any of it was "intentional"?
I don't tell folks how to live theirs and if they think they should tell me how I should live.
I agree the problem is in my experience certain individuals view a difference of opinions to their own as an encroachment upon themselves personally as though they are being told "do it this way", bit like the OP stating.... "if you want to hunt dangerous game, let it be dangerous, otherwise you may as well just shoot deer."

But if you agree with <insert any statement here> then you probably won't view it as someone trying to tell you how to live your life.
 
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@double rifle newbie - You can easily get 6 shots off at a charging Griz IF YOU DON”T LOOK AT YOUR STOP WATCH TO TIME THE CHARGE !!
I respectfully disagree that six quality shots from a bolt action can be fired at something that’s moving that fast towards you.

what bolt action do you own that you can fire six without reloading?
 
I respectfully disagree that six quality shots from a bolt action can be fired at something that’s moving that fast towards you.

what bolt action do you own that you can fire six without reloading?
@double rifle newbie - Before I explain how to fire off 6 shots from a bolt action rifle at a charging animal we need to WORK ON YOUR SENSE OF HUMOR —-clearly you’re missing the bullseye on that one !
 
In my view, one of the most fearsome and cunning predators among all DG is the Royal Bengal Tiger—strength, guile, agility, patience, and raw power rolled into one animal.

I never hunted them myself, but I grew up on my grandfather’s stories from the forests of Palamu, Daltonganj, and Betla in eastern India. What always stood out was how he hunted: always on foot and from the ground. Never from a machan. He used to say he couldn’t take proper aim from a platform—and he trusted his feet, not a perch.

His gun is a relic even by the standards of the day—a British Paradox 12 bore hammer gun, made by Manton, smoothbore with rifling at the muzzle.

He often spoke of being followed for miles by a tiger that never showed itself—always downwind, always unseen—waiting for the right moment. And then there were the nights: stuck up a tree because it was too dangerous to walk back to the village, the roar rolling through the dark close enough to rattle your chest. No radios. No watches. No backup. Just the knowledge that something far more capable than you knew exactly where you were.

Once, during a driven hunt, he told of a moment that still gives me chills. He neither heard nor saw a large Indian Sloth Bear approach from behind. When he finally turned, the bear was already there, standing upright, claws out, about to strike. He fired with the barrel touching the bear’s chest. That’s how close it was.

To me, that is dangerous game hunting in its purest form—no distance, no margin, no safety net. Just nerve, judgment, and resolve.

I can only hope I carry even an ounce of that courage.
 
I enjoy hunting buffalo for the same reason I enjoy hunting kudu: they are both smart and experts using the environment to their advantage. The danger element really doesn't factor into it for me. Probably because I'm basically fearless. So getting up close for the thrill is no big deal.
 
Tomcat, From everything I’ve read, including “The Last Tiger Hunter”. I agree the the Bengel Tiger seems more cunning and deliberate. Maybe because the Bengel Tiger lives more closely to humans than the other big cats? Of course it’s my uneducated guess.
 
I don’t know about “basically fearless”, but definitely “tone deaf”. You ever read the crap you write before you hit send?
 
I enjoy hunting buffalo for the same reason I enjoy hunting kudu: they are both smart and experts using the environment to their advantage. The danger element really doesn't factor into it for me. Probably because I'm basically fearless. So getting up close for the thrill is no big deal.
@Ontario Hunter - yes “Fearless”…that’s the word always associated with You
 
Sorry if it offends you guys but it is what it is. There are only two things that I'm afraid of. One was losing my family. It happened twice unexpectedly and yes it terrorized me. To the very core. The other is inanimate and environmental. I can deal with it but the fear is still there. It's a secret that I've never told anyone, including my daughter. I have been chased by grizzlies and moose, nearly drowned, through the ice three times, terrible car wreck, essentially froze to death, horse wreck, lost in a blizzard, wildfire burned over me in a deployed fire shelter, attacked by crazy bar flies on and off the job, hit in the head with a club in a riot, etc. Never got scared. Just very angry. It's the way I am. Don't get my jollies pushing the envelope on purpose. Getting pissed off is not a pleasing experience. Not for me anyway.
 
Well, I have movie star good looks and am richer than 3 feet up a bull’s ass. And for you women, I’m a helicopter pilot and I own this bar. Just sayin’. :cool:
 
In my view, one of the most fearsome and cunning predators among all DG is the Royal Bengal Tiger—strength, guile, agility, patience, and raw power rolled into one animal.

I never hunted them myself, but I grew up on my grandfather’s stories from the forests of Palamu, Daltonganj, and Betla in eastern India. What always stood out was how he hunted: always on foot and from the ground. Never from a machan. He used to say he couldn’t take proper aim from a platform—and he trusted his feet, not a perch.

His gun is a relic even by the standards of the day—a British Paradox 12 bore hammer gun, made by Manton, smoothbore with rifling at the muzzle.

He often spoke of being followed for miles by a tiger that never showed itself—always downwind, always unseen—waiting for the right moment. And then there were the nights: stuck up a tree because it was too dangerous to walk back to the village, the roar rolling through the dark close enough to rattle your chest. No radios. No watches. No backup. Just the knowledge that something far more capable than you knew exactly where you were.

He was unlucky that there was no website with casino games at that time, which is famous for its fast payouts. I can imagine my grandfather's surprise if he had won $50 after hunting.

Once, during a driven hunt, he told of a moment that still gives me chills. He neither heard nor saw a large Indian Sloth Bear approach from behind. When he finally turned, the bear was already there, standing upright, claws out, about to strike. He fired with the barrel touching the bear’s chest. That’s how close it was.

To me, that is dangerous game hunting in its purest form—no distance, no margin, no safety net. Just nerve, judgment, and resolve.

I can only hope I carry even an ounce of that courage.
On foot, no elevation, no buffer, trusting awareness and nerve more than equipment. Being hunted back by a tiger you never see is a different kind of terror. Your grandfather’s world demanded a level of calm and resolve most of us will never truly know.
 
Can we have a civil discussion on this topic..?

To my mind, if you want to hunt dangerous game, let it be dangerous, otherwise you may as well just shoot deer. DG is to be shot at as close range as possible, either with a bolt rifle or a double..

A buffalo is not dangerous when you shoot him at 80 yards with a .375H&H from sticks.. I mean..if you hunt DG, isnt the taste of danger a part of the experience..?
I dont think I have the same appreciation alot of folks have for the danger part that alot of folks seem to.

theres plenty of warzones if you want to play a truely dangerous game.

Id put all hunting into the controlled/ mitigated risk catagory vs actually dangerous. I mean how many people are going out just them a rifle and the bush looking for a pride of lions without a team of other well armed guys?...

I say do what makes you happy as long as its done legally and ethically. But i dont view hunting as dangerous.

Climbing k2 is dangerous how many hunters in africa a year die compared to the number that do not.
 
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