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Shooting & Reloading - Mausers, Big Bores and others >> Big Bore Rifles

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EricD
.416 member


Reged: 27/02/04
Posts: 4636
Mag. Mauser
      #19884 - 20/10/04 10:14 PM

The Mauser Magnum 100 year commemorative .375H&H I bought this last spring has finally been used to shoot things other than paper! It was loaded with 350 grain Rhino bullets using Norma 19 powder to reach 730 m/s.

You guys from Canada, Alaska or other areas with huge moose might have a laugh, but here in Norway we have to shoot both calves, 1 1/2 year olds ("teenagers") and cows, besides the bulls. To sustain a "perfectly balanced" moose population. So I have to admit that the pictures below aren't very impressive for those who are used to huge moose with enormous antlers! This year it's only been cows for me and the Mauser (at least so far, since we have 1 bull left.). I've shot 2 cows this year, and the Mauser functioned flawlessly of course. As did the Zeiss 2.5-10x50 Variopoint. It's basically rained and been pretty dark all the time, with little to no sunshine... The red dot showed up on the side of the moose in such a way that I honostly feel I was able to aquire the target quicker.

To sum it up, the Mauser did everything it was supposed to do!



It's best to get the kids used to hunting while their young


One thing we found interesting this year is that only about half the amount of the moose we usually spot were observed. This has been the same for our nabouring areas too. Whilst areas a bit further away have seen more than usual. Our guess is that it might be due to preditors... A lot of bear dung has been found this fall, and wolves have been observed this last summer. We're thinking that many moose have moved a bit away to other areas to escape the pressure of these preditors... Undoubtably they will return, since there are no permanant preditors living in the area, but it's been a bit irritating for this season...

Erik D.


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WyoJoe
.300 member


Reged: 18/02/04
Posts: 234
Loc: Cheyenne, WY USA
Re: Mag. Mauser [Re: EricD]
      #19891 - 21/10/04 02:47 AM

ErikD,
I would not laugh at you shooting a cow or calf moose. Here is a picture of the elk I got this year. Got it with the .375 loaded with the 270 gr Hornady loaded over 67 gr of Varget. It is a calf but it is some mighty fine eating. I think you have picked a winner of a cartridge.



Here is a picture of my buddy's cow shot about a minute before I got mine.



--------------------
There comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor polite, nor popular -- but one must ask, "Is it right?"

Martin Luther King, Jr.


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AdamTayler
.375 member


Reged: 22/03/04
Posts: 688
Loc: B.C.
Re: Mag. Mauser [Re: EricD]
      #19904 - 21/10/04 03:00 PM

Erik

You lucky guy! How many moose are you allowed to shoot per year? In B.C. the bad limit is one per year. A couple of friends of mine and their hunting party just got back from Prince George and the count was 3 moose and 3 deer. Unfortunately the three moose where calves, a season that I do not agree with. As far as I'm concerned, moose is the best meat around, and beats the hell out of elk, which everyone I've talked to raves about. As for the wolves, shoot every one that you can, and thin out the bear population, as both prey on the calves. I know they have their place, but I would rather fill my belly that theirs.

Adam

--------------------
It's the journey, not the destination.


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EricD
.416 member


Reged: 27/02/04
Posts: 4636
Re: Mag. Mauser [Re: AdamTayler]
      #19906 - 21/10/04 06:05 PM

Adam,

Our quota this year is 18 moose, devided between the differant age groups. 3 bulls, 3 cows, 6 teens and 6 calves. We have decided to skip the last 2 calves though, since things this year are differant (because of the bear or whaterver). This is in a 1800 hectare area.

As for shooting wolves and bears, although I personally am all for it, it is illegal ... The thing is that wolves were shot out in Norway about 100 years ago. There wasn't 1 single wolf left. Then mysteriously they started to reappear a little over a decade ago. the mysterious part is how they got to where they were sighted. If you look at a map of Scandinavia, they supposedly walked without being sighted, all the way from Finland (actually the wolves here have been DNA tested and genetically come from down around the Baltic countrys like Lithuania), and down to the southern part of Norway. This is way over 1000 km just from the Finnish border. It is very unlikely that wolves would not have been spotted by anyone for this distance, which is also thru populated areas. Not to mention up in the north where the Lapplanders live. Nothing moves on the tundra and in the mountains without them knowing it. What many people think actually happened though, and there has even been a couple of documentaries made about it but without any proof, is that the wolves were re-introduced by man...

Amongst other things, there were wolves that were sold from a zoo in the Baltics and shipped to Sweden. Strangely, they were supposedly destroyed only 2 weeks later, although no one in Sweden will say why (kind of strange after just paying lots of money for them???), or where any of the remains are.

There have been quite a lot of sightings of strange happenings that would indicate that this is correct. In fact a friend of my wife worked for a time with the govt. project tracking wolves, and is convinced that a handfull of govt funded scientists are behind the whole thing. Together with Swedish colleages. She told us about one incident where they come upon a car track at a dead-end road in a forest. There was tracking snow. Oddly, a wolf track went out from the dead-end turning area, but no track went in! So it was obvious that the wolf hadn't just crossed onto the road, sniffed the car tracks and moved on. Either it magically appeared, parachuted in, or was let out of the van... I think the van is most likely! This friend of ours was very "Pro wolf" to begin with, and interestingly enough is now totally against them being in Norway. I guess she's seen too many things that indicate that our population is being tricked.

Another odd thing is that in some areas, the govt. is saying that the wolves are beginning to become inbred!!! Logically, if the wolves got there by themselves, and there is no lack of wolves where they supposedly came from, why areen't new ones naturally coming to the same area? In this case they have openly said that they want to "relocate" to the area.

The only upside IMO is that certain people in certain areas are taking the law into their own hands. At least a few wolves every year are illigally shot. If a person is caught shooting a wolf, or any evidence is left, it's straight off to jail...

Although we personally have been spared the worst, my cousin for example has had his moose quota about halved in the past decade. And few people are keen to let their hunting dogs loose in that area because the dogs get eaten...

Sorry for the longwinded post, but our problem here is that the wolf no longer has a place in our society. Norway isn't set up to have wolves, since we are a small country with no unpopulated areas large enough to make it problem free. The argument of the pro-wolf people is that no wolves have been reported to kill a human here in such a long time. That it affects peoples lives in other negative ways is obviously not important to them... And I doubt that a wolf will take on a grown human. But I have no doubt that a young kid will make a tasty treat for a wolf...

Do you have any knowledge of wolves attacking humans in North America? I know it happens in Russia and in India.

The wolf subject just gets me real mad...

Erik D.


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wombat
.300 member


Reged: 06/03/04
Posts: 163
Loc: Australia
Re: Mag. Mauser [Re: EricD]
      #19908 - 21/10/04 08:30 PM

A baby was taken by a dingo some years back and a nine
year old boy killed by a dingo about 1 year ago here in Australia.Dingo's are much smaller than wolves-you will have children taken.


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