In our Deer Emergency work in the New Forest area we have had 305 calls to date and in those that needed dispatch only 3 were finished using a knife...all does...we also have captive bolts available when a firearm is not on...
Folding .410 with a moderator even better, or to reduce kit, a reduced load cast lead round in the same calibre as the rifle (bullet carried separately for obvious reasons)An alternative option is frangible 12G ammunition such as HADSafe etc. and whilst I’m not aware of a commercial equivalent for centrefire calibres you could develop a HADSafe homeload e.g utilising frangible pistol bullets.
Nooooo, just some want themThis is why stalkers need small handguns.
but that won't happen thank God Here we go. The ever present but very surprising anti gun rhetoric on a shooting site.Nooooo, just some want thembut that won't happen thank God
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I stand up for it a lot just don't think people need to have their pistols back with the poor excuse they shoot deer.Here we go. The ever present but very surprising anti gun rhetoric on a shooting site.
Way to go standing up for our sport .
If going down the cast bullet route you will have to be certain that your loads are significantly reduced. With this in mind I did some penetration tests with a 175grn lead bullet and a fairly light Trailboss load out of my 8x57irs rifle and was totally taken by surprise at the amount of penetration into softwood achieved. I now know why hard cast Buffalo Bullets (the company) are so recommended in north America as a defence round against bears and other large predators.Folding .410 with a moderator even better, or to reduce kit, a reduced load cast lead round in the same calibre as the rifle (bullet carried separately for obvious reasons)
Frangible bullets would need to be ones specifically designed for the task. Different people have totally different perceptions of the word frangible in relation to bullets. Some consider a jacketed hollow point that expands greatly as frangible, it's not. Truly frangible pistol and rifle bullets are made from sintered polymer or light metals and basically turn to dust on impact with a hard surface. They are usually used by the military and the police in training environments.An alternative option is frangible 12G ammunition such as HADSafe etc. and whilst I’m not aware of a commercial equivalent for centrefire calibres you could develop a HADSafe homeload e.g utilising frangible pistol bullets.
A chap I know very well has a lot of stock but had never put any of his stock down, so I went with my .410 and did a dry run for him, he shoots and has sgc also a .410.If going down the cast bullet route you will have to be certain that your loads are significantly reduced. With this in mind I did some penetration tests with a 175grn lead bullet and a fairly light Trailboss load out of my 8x57irs rifle and was totally taken by surprise at the amount of penetration into softwood achieved. I now know why hard cast Buffalo Bullets (the company) are so recommended in north America as a defence round against bears and other large predators.
Frangible bullets would need to be ones specifically designed for the task. Different people have totally different perceptions of the word frangible in relation to bullets. Some consider a jacketed hollow point that expands greatly as frangible, it's not. Truly frangible pistol and rifle bullets are made from sintered polymer or light metals and basically turn to dust on impact with a hard surface. They are usually used by the military and the police in training environments.
I'm not familiar with the HADSafe round that you mention would I be correct in assuming that it's basically similar to a Hatton breaching round?
I've done it less than that, just the once in my case and that was a roe also.Only done it twice, once “commando” style around throat, the other, the classic bleed technique. Neither was easy and the strength of the young roe was surprisingly given the shot damage. Like @ColinBr It took me a few minutes to come to terms with what I had done and suffice to say, in the only instance since, I’ve elected for a second shot coup de grace. No way would I countenance the knife on a larger beast.
You are aware this is a thread about dispatching injured deer whilst stalking ?I stand up for it a lot just don't think people need to have their pistols back with the poor excuse they shoot deer.
Move to the US and you can have as many as you like.![]()
Personally I would only do it with certain deer.I was watching a clip on YouTube, The stalker being interviewed mentions that he dispatches injured deer by using a knife rather than shooting them when it is unsafe or pulling out a firearm might upset Karen nextdoor
Having never had to do it, I was wondering how it's usually done with out it turning into a slasher movie ?