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Planning

It may be Spring, and your thoughts are upon calling in a gobbler, hunting black bears, or, if you’re truly fortunate, heading to the southern hemisphere in search of big game adventures. Those, indeed, are fun and genuinely worthwhile. Even if those are, or are not, in your immediate future, I feel you are also thinking about the coming fall hunting seasons. I know I am! Fall hunting seasons are only about six or seven months away…  Sound like a long time? It’s not!

Over my many years of working as a wildlife biologist, outdoor writer, and television show host, I had the opportunity to hunt many places and big game with a variety of guns, optics, ammunition, and other hunting “equipment.” I learned some valuable lessons, and I continue to do so.

These days, when most people my age are retired, I am forging forth at full speed—well, maybe at a slightly reduced pace compared to thirty years ago. Today, I use the guns, optics, and ammunition I want to use based on my experience of several decades of hunting throughout the world. That’s not to say I am not willing to use something n w. As a matter of fact, I have just started using and am planning on using several “new things.”

It all starts this Spring with a black bear hunt in Alberta.  Currently, sitting at my desk during the first week of April, I have just sent one of my Mossberg rifles to be re-barreled with an Avient composite-based technology barrel.  The barrel will be chambered in the “new” 7mm PRC, and it will be 20 inches long.  I like relatively short barrels, and the beauty of the new 7mm round from Hornady is that the round performs exceptionally well through a 20-inch barrel.

As soon as the new barrel has been installed, it is being sent to Stealth Vision in Crockett, Texas, where one of their Tactical SVT 3-18×44, 34mm tube scopes with the potential of a lighted reticle will be mounted and then sighted in with either Hornady 175-grain ELD-X Precision Hunter or Hornady 160-grain CX Outfitter.  Both will be tried and whichever particular barrel I like will be the one I will be hunting with this on the upcoming black bear hunt.

This past fall, hunting whitetails with Avient’s Jesse Baird and my old friend Jim Bequette, formerly long the editor of SHOOTING TIMES, I had the opportunity to see and then shoot a rifle using their revolutionary Avient Composite Heat Release Barrel Technology. I was tremendously impressed with how extremely accurately it shot various Hornady ammo and the fact we could not get the barrel even warm, even with shooting a magazine full of ammo in rapid succession. More about that in the near future, especially after I have had the opportunity to run my newly barreled 7mm PRC through its paces at Stealth Vision’s shooting range, at targets out to 1,200 yards.

I plan on using the new Stealth Vision scope, designed primarily by Dr. John McCall, a preeminent eye surgeon who loves shooting and hunting. Who, after not being satisfied with other scopes, decided to create his own based on his many years of learning about the human eye but also because of many, many hours spent shooting from a bench and hunting throughout the world.

Having previously used scopes, I consider the world’s best hunting optics created by major brands; I really like the new Stealth Optics line of scopes and other hunting optics. That is why am having one of their scopes mounted on my hunting rifles. More about these optics, like Avient’s Composite Heat Release Barrel Technology, in the near future.

This Fall I have numerous hunts planned including a moose in British Columbia, whitetail deer in Finland, plus on several ranches in Texas, including my western Texas lease and the Cotton Ranch, and on the Choctaw Hunting Lodge in Oklahoma.

I have stated in the past that if I could only use one round hunting the world, it would be the .375 Ruger. With that in mind, I recently ordered a Mossberg Patriot in .375 Ruger. Once it arrives, I will top it with the same Stealth Vision scope I will have on my 7mm PRC. The combination will be sighted in with Hornady’s 250-grain CX Outfitter ammunition. This particular bullet is designed for deep penetration and has excellent terminal performance. I have used the CX bullet in the past on other big game hunts, so I know it is an excellent choice for tough, tenacious, big-bodied moose.

I am hunting whitetails in Finland with Stefan and Sophia Bengtsson with Scandinavian Prohunters. I am borrowing a rifle from the outfitter. Normally, I always take my own rifle on hunts. But I know Stefan has some extremely accurate “loaners” that will be loaded with Hornady ammunition. Which of his rifles will I be using, or which caliber/round? I will find out when I get there in November.

I have ordered a third Mossberg Patriot Predator, which should arrive in the next few weeks. That one is chambered in 6.5 PRC. Again, for me, something new. My primary purpose for procuring the rifle is because I wanted to do more long-range shooting and because I had the opportunity to shoot my good friend David Cotton’s Mossberg and another rifle chambered in the same round while shooting at Stealth Vision’s facility. In both instances, I shot Hornady’s 143-grain ELD-X Precision Hunter. Shooting at Stealth Vision’s facility, I was able to shoot 2-inch 3-shot groups at 1,000 yards. Impressed me!

I do not consider myself a long-range hunter. I have always wanted to get as close as possible before pulling the trigger, one of the numerous reasons I like hunting with .44 Mag and .454 Casull Taurus Raging Hunter double-action revolvers. But sometimes getting close is impossible, and having passed the age of three score and ten, I am not as agile as I once was, nor do I want to walk as far as once I did or could. But my desire to take a game has not changed since I was a mere youngster. 

After shooting some of the newer Hornady PRC rounds, seeing how accurately they shoot at long range and how well their bullets perform at distances near and far, coupled with my age, I am reconsidering some of my “feelings” about long range.

This past fall, while hunting at my lease in western Texas, on several occasions in the low country, I spotted a particularly large antlered buck, usually at least a half-mile or farther away. Where he seemingly lived was in the middle of a relatively open 1,200-acre pasture. All my attempts to get close failed. I could close the distance to within about 600 yards, but that was as near to him as I could get. I tried many ways to get closer to no avail.

During the closing days of our extended Texas Managed Land Deer Permit (MLDP) hunting season, I spotted an even bigger buck. He had taken up company with the original buck I was after. There simply was no way to get close, but I tried. At the time, I was hunting with my Mossberg 7mm PRC, which was loaded with a 175-grain ELD-X Hornady Precision Hunter. The rifle–load combination was certainly capable of shooting well beyond 600 yards. But I had not then really spent time at the range practicing and shooting at that distance and beyond.

I recently ordered a Mossberg Patriot Predator in 6.5 PRC.

That said, you may be asking, “If you have a 7mm PRC totally capable of accurately shooting at distances well beyond 600 yards, why are you getting a 6.5 PRC?”  Actually, that is a legitimate question. My answer is, “I simply want a 6.5 PRC!”

Once the 6.5 PRC arrives, I will mount a Stealth Vision 3-18×42 Tactical SVT scope and spend time on the range shooting Hornady 143-grain Precision Hunter out to 1,200 yards to learn the rifle’s capabilities and mine with it. I, too, may replace the factory barrel with an Avient after-market barrel.

This fall, I plan on using the 6.5 PRC not only in western Texas to hopefully take one of the two bucks that stayed beyond my comfort range but also to use on a Coues whitetail deer hunt in Durango, Mexico. Coues deer hunting can sometimes truly be a long-range hunt. My biggest antlered Coues buck I took in Sonora with a Ruger American .30-06 shooting Hornady’s 180-grain Interlock at a distance of about 800 yards. This was after we tried every possible way to cut the distance short of digging a tunnel. Thankfully, at the time, I had shot that rifle/scope/ammo combination quite a bit out to 800 yards at steel.

At another time we’ll visit about my handgun hunting plans.  ut will mention I will be doing a certain amount of hunting with both my Taurus Raging Hunter double action revolvers in .454 Casull and .44 Mag, shooting appropriate Hornady ammo.

As mentioned, now is the time to plan for the Fall hunting seasons, even and especially if it means using something new like I am and particularly in changing some in the way I will be hunting!

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