375H&H...now what?

Caribou, pick a country.

Above the Hudson Bay or Adak Island.

Want the real big one go to Adak.

Want wolves go above the Hudson, want to be eaten by wolves be on the first flight in. It's like dropping in a hot LZ......jump out shooting.
 
Will you be taking the bride with you?
If I go, my bride goes.
She's tougher than most, and a pretty damn good shot with her 270 WIN.
Example...rode 13 hours in the rain, in a motorcycle sidecar, got out at the hotel...dripping wet asked if the pool was open.
Great woman with a sense of humor and love for the outdoors.
She's earned her stripes and goes where I go, no questions.
 
I used the .375 when deer hunting the islands in Prince William Sound, Alaska. You never knew when you would bump into a brown bear.
In NW Wyoning the bears know a rifle shot means a game animal is down, and they move in to "bump" the hunter off the kill.
One more reason to have an extra set of eyes (me) looking around as my wife dresses the game.
Great post. I think to justify the weight you lug around it would have to be somewhere where the animal poses a serious danger. I have taken mine moose hunting but the rifle bulkiness gets to me in that terrain after a while. Having said that, I think Alsaka, North BC are perfect places.
The weight of my 375 is a bit heavy I have to admit, but I've never had a problem lugging it all day.
After the first couple of days I'm used to it, but I believe I understand your point.
Heavy gun should be used for heavy game...right?
 
The weight of my 375 is a bit heavy I have to admit, but I've never had a problem lugging it all day.
After the first couple of days I'm used to it, but I believe I understand your point.
Heavy gun should be used for heavy game...right?

I am coming to that theory. I enjoy the caliber so much I tried to make it my first choice for moose. But this year I am going with a 30 cal of some form. I just found trudging through the swamps and overgrown areas to be a little more effort then it needs to be. Your thread keeps me ruminating on it:) it is a great caliber.
 
I am coming to that theory. I enjoy the caliber so much I tried to make it my first choice for moose. But this year I am going with a 30 cal of some form. I just found trudging through the swamps and overgrown areas to be a little more effort then it needs to be. Your thread keeps me ruminating on it:) it is a great caliber.
I would take the 375 because it's what I have and I like it.
If I had money to burn (well, I'd be hunting instead of typing) I may opt for a 338WM for moose that weighs a little less than the 375.
Good luck with your moose, whichever caliber you decide on.
 
In NW Wyoning the bears know a rifle shot means a game animal is down, and they move in to "bump" the hunter off the kill.
One more reason to have an extra set of eyes (me) looking around as my wife dresses the game.

The weight of my 375 is a bit heavy I have to admit, but I've never had a problem lugging it all day.
After the first couple of days I'm used to it, but I believe I understand your point.
Heavy gun should be used for heavy game...right?

I lived in WY before moving to Alaska. What a great state! I know what u mean about those bear. Remember the 3 S’s of a bear encounter.
 
If I go, my bride goes.
She's tougher than most, and a pretty damn good shot with her 270 WIN.
Example...rode 13 hours in the rain, in a motorcycle sidecar, got out at the hotel...dripping wet asked if the pool was open.
Great woman with a sense of humor and love for the outdoors.
She's earned her stripes and goes where I go, no questions.

Fair enough. My wife is a fair trooper too, but I'm not sure I'd take her to a Russian bear hunt camp. The typical thing I read about those camps is at best fair and usually it doesn't seem that good. Even to someone used to typical tent camping. But to each his own.

Personally if it were me, I'd tell it's back to Africa in 2020 or whenever for a buff or ele hunt.
 
I lived in WY before moving to Alaska. What a great state! I know what u mean about those bear. Remember the 3 S’s of a bear encounter.
Oh yeah, it's "S"ound like a "S"issy as I "S"@#$% my pants and run away.
 
No one mentioned Polar Bear? I just saw a hunt advertised the other day for one. If she doesn't mind the cold...there is also muskox as well.
 
As a fellow .375'er, the New Zealand red stag is definitely on my list. The animal is impressive, the hunting is challenging, the prices are decent and the place is undoubtedly somewhere I'd take a special lady.

A similarly-spectacular animal can be found in Argentina (where if you also take a shotgun you'll feel like a kid in a candy-store). Ditto in Eastern Europe, where there are also a host of other antelopes like the fallow deer, plus bear and hog in abundance.

If you want to go really exotic, but still keep things moderate in prices, an argali hunt in the Gobi Desert will give you bragging rights about having been in places only mentioned on Jeopardy!, plus a truly impressive trophy sheep.

Finland and the Baltic states have moose that is not as wild to reach or expensive to hunt as its Alaskan or Canadian counterpart. I highly recommend visiting the Nordic countries, and stopping in Tallin for a wonderful old-world experience.

And of course, the low-hanging fruit: have you already completed the African spiral-horn grand slam, even without the must-be-a-millionaire-to-hunt bongo?

Just a few ideas that won't break the bank--since you're a traveling duo.
 
T
As a fellow .375'er, the New Zealand red stag is definitely on my list. The animal is impressive, the hunting is challenging, the prices are decent and the place is undoubtedly somewhere I'd take a special lady.

A similarly-spectacular animal can be found in Argentina (where if you also take a shotgun you'll feel like a kid in a candy-store). Ditto in Eastern Europe, where there are also a host of other antelopes like the fallow deer, plus bear and hog in abundance.

If you want to go really exotic, but still keep things moderate in prices, an argali hunt in the Gobi Desert will give you bragging rights about having been in places only mentioned on Jeopardy!, plus a truly impressive trophy sheep.

Finland and the Baltic states have moose that is not as wild to reach or expensive to hunt as its Alaskan or Canadian counterpart. I highly recommend visiting the Nordic countries, and stopping in Tallin for a wonderful old-world experience.

And of course, the low-hanging fruit: have you already completed the African spiral-horn grand slam, even without the must-be-a-millionaire-to-hunt bongo?

Just a few ideas that won't break the bank--since you're a traveling duo.
Tom, what is the rifle in your Avatar? Bill
 
Hi, Bill--it's a 1925 .375 Flanged Magnum single-shot falling block built on a 1902 Webley action. It came scoped (done after WW2) with a fixed-power 6x42 Zeiss Diatal in claw-mounts. As a rifle, it is a "minor celebrity" for having been described and mentioned by serial number in the book The British Single-Shot Rifle, Volume V. According to the original H&H records, it was made for a gent who was on his way to the Himalayas (perhaps after thar? the mind wonders!).


15994900_10211972050165006_818298357854779370_o.jpg


15994853_10211972050325010_5399465570002342017_o.jpg


It even does slightly better than this with my own home-brewed loads (68gr RL 15, 270gr Speer BTSp)--I can generally put three shots into a cloverleaf. I really, REALLY lucked out with this gun. It's the sort of thing you wake up on a cold, rainy, boring work-day, you think about this rifle and you get up with a spring in your step.
 

Attachments

  • 15994900_10211972050165006_818298357854779370_o.jpg
    15994900_10211972050165006_818298357854779370_o.jpg
    392.8 KB · Views: 186
  • 15994853_10211972050325010_5399465570002342017_o.jpg
    15994853_10211972050325010_5399465570002342017_o.jpg
    295.9 KB · Views: 194
Last edited:
Hi, Bill--it's a 1925 .375 Flanged Magnum falling block built on a 1902 Webley action. It came scoped (done after WW2) with a fixed-power 6x Zeiss in claw-mounts. As a rifle, it is a "minor celebrity" for having been described and mentioned by serial number in the book The British Single-Shot Rifle, Volume V. According to the original H&H records, it was made for a gent who was on his way to the Himalayas (perhaps after thar? the mind wonders!).


15994900_10211972050165006_818298357854779370_o.jpg




It even does slightly better than this with my own home-brewed loads (68gr RL 15, 270gr Speer BTSp)--I can generally put three shots into a cloverleaf. I really, REALLY lucked out with this gun. It's the sort of thing you wake up on a cold, rainy, boring work-day, you think about this rifle and you get up with a spring in your step.
WOW! That is a special rifle. I want to hear the story over a good glass of scotch one of these days!
 
You bet! And I mean it! :)
 
Argentinian buffalo is on my personal short list for a non-Africa .375 hunt....

A reasonably affordable hunt.. in a place thats pretty easy to get to, and pretty inexpensive to get to (by comparison with most European/African/Asian destinations) from anywhere in the US..

And I dig the funky horns on them.. :)

Argentina-42-Water-Buffalo.jpg
 

Attachments

  • Argentina-42-Water-Buffalo.jpg
    Argentina-42-Water-Buffalo.jpg
    129.4 KB · Views: 299
Last edited by a moderator:
I'd go for Ibex in Kyzerkistan or what ever former USSR- although I understand it's difficult to take your own rifle.
 
No one mentioned Polar Bear? I just saw a hunt advertised the other day for one. If she doesn't mind the cold...there is also muskox as well.
She doesn't mind the cold and neither do I, so it would be an excellent choice.
Except for the fact that you can no longer import the skin back into the US...which sucks, but it's still a contender.
As a fellow .375'er, the New Zealand red stag is definitely on my list.

A similarly-spectacular animal can be found in Argentina.

Eastern Europe, where there are also a host of other antelopes like the fallow deer, plus bear and hog in abundance.

Argali hunt in the Gobi Desert, plus a truly impressive trophy sheep.

Finland and the Baltic states have moose.

I highly recommend visiting the Nordic countries, and stopping in Tallin for a wonderful old-world experience.

And of course, the low-hanging fruit: African spiral-horn grand slam, even without the must-be-a-millionaire-to-hunt bongo?
Tom - You've given me quite the list and I assure you I will research them all.
Thank you very much and I too would enjoy a wee dram with a look at that rifle.
Argentinian buffalo is on my personal short list for a non-Africa .375 hunt....
And I dig the funky horns on them.. :)
I dig the funky horns too.
Next year I hope to have some funky Black Wildebeest on the wall.
Argentina makes the list for Red Stag, Asian Buffalo and the bird hunting.
Definitely a place high on the list.
Thanks mdwest.
I'd go for Ibex in Kyzerkistan or what ever former USSR- although I understand it's difficult to take your own rifle.
I will need to look more closely into this, although I'm not sure about the rifle thing either.
Thank you for the idea.
 
New Zealand or Australia, and Water Buffalo & Red Stag. I'm actually thinking about doing that myself with either my 404 Jeffery or a 375 H&H.
 
New Zealand or Australia, and Water Buffalo & Red Stag. I'm actually thinking about doing that myself with either my 404 Jeffery or a 375 H&H.
Poor old red won't put up much of a fight to those cannons!
 
Poor old red won't put up much of a fight to those cannons!
It is my understanding that Argentina Red Stag weigh around 400-500# (200-225 KG).
I don't think the 375 is out of bounds for an animal of that size.
Besides, I'm getting too old to be tracking game anymore.
Have a friend who started using his 375 on whitetail and hasn't tracked a deer since, dead where they were shot.
Looses some meat, but here in Virginia deer are a nuisance and Fish & Game is happy to have you take more.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
53,988
Messages
1,142,464
Members
93,353
Latest member
LucaFitzgi
 

 

 

Latest posts

Latest profile posts

Cwoody wrote on Woodcarver's profile.
Shot me email if Beretta 28 ga DU is available
Thank you
Pancho wrote on Safari Dave's profile.
Enjoyed reading your post again. Believe this is the 3rd time. I am scheduled to hunt w/ Legadema in Sep. Really looking forward to it.
check out our Buff hunt deal!
Because of some clients having to move their dates I have 2 prime time slots open if anyone is interested to do a hunt
5-15 May
or 5-15 June is open!
shoot me a message for a good deal!
dogcat1 wrote on skydiver386's profile.
I would be interested in it if you pass. Please send me the info on the gun shop if you do not buy it. I have the needed ammo and brass.
Thanks,
Ross
 
Top