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Joined:  Oct 2008 
Posts: 190  
Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
Joined:  Oct 2008 
Posts: 190  | 
I don't think there's any more snobbery in a small gauge than in sxs guns.      Unless it's a B'ham gun, those are just sad       I had to hide this post from my Skimin and Wood. It might have hurt the big guy's feelings.    
 
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Joined:  Jan 2006 
Posts: 15,462 Likes: 89  
Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
Joined:  Jan 2006 
Posts: 15,462 Likes: 89  | 
 What I was commeting about were folks who seem to think that light guns, gauges, and loads are somehow "virtuous", in themselves, and that using "heavier" is somehow "unsporting", "gamehoggery" and/or "low class". In my experience, the category of shotgunners, in the U.S., who seem to be most prone to this tendency are quail hunters. 
 And most have never shot a wild quail....  
 
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Joined:  Jun 2002 
Posts: 9,350  
Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
Joined:  Jun 2002 
Posts: 9,350  | 
Yes, it's a magnum for the gauge, absolutely.  I also believe Destry's experience makes him an exception in the use of magnums. He's almost a full-time gunner chasing birds wherever they are. I doubt magnums are "fantasy" to him. 
 
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Joined:  Dec 2008 
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Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
Joined:  Dec 2008 
Posts: 2,292  | 
 And most have never shot a wild quail.... 
 Anybody who lives West of ABQ hunts only wild birds and animals as there are no  game farms or pen raised animals/birds that I know of...... jOe, Instead of shooting the B-52's you like to stack from behind a tree......, you need to travel West and try the fastest flushing  wild game bird in North America......a bird that really knows how to motor and flush......and requires a nice 5-10 mile jaunt over hill and dale at altitudes Easterner's can only dream of......... and do it all without a dog and see how smart and good a hunter you really are.............. It would test your speed, agility and swing in short order......and your fitness........oh ya, and your gun, choke and gauge choices........  
 
  
Doug
 
 
  
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Joined:  Jul 2005 
Posts: 7,065 Likes: 1  
Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
Joined:  Jul 2005 
Posts: 7,065 Likes: 1  | 
I shoot light small-bore guns at wild Bobwhite over Brittanys.  Usually a 5-1/2 pound sixteen gauge.  I also have some down to 4-1/2 pounds.  When I get into a discussion of sport and gauge here it is usually after someone has disparaged the use of small gauges and they usually state that a 12 gauge should be used from pointed Bobwhite up through pheasant.
  The point of being out watching the pointing dogs is sport.  The point of using a small gauge is sport.  The rational choice is to get your Gallinaceous bird at drive-up window at Kentucky Fried Chicken and be done with it.
  One of my customers has a 200,000 acre ranch.  He is an avid Bobwhite hunter and has been for decades and spends huge sums of money on habitat and hunting each year.  He has studied both the birds and the hunting.  I get to  go with him now and then.  He has a rule that no 12 gauges are allowed - and no shot smaller than #8.  It is his opinion that the 42% increase in shot of 12ga over 20ga inadverdently wounds and kills birds besides the intended to a greater extent than a smaller shot charge.
  I was in Montana in September.  I took an old beat-up eight pound Parker 12 bore because I shoot it well.  A pointed covey of Huns flushed and I knocked down four birds with one shot.  1-1/8 ounce of 8s out of a cylinder choke.  I only intended to hit one and the rest were behind the targeted bird.  I shot several more inadverdent "doubles" on that trip, usually on Sharptails.
  My current thinking is that 3/4 ounces of #9 shot out of a modified or full choke might be the optimum combination when trying to limit "collateral" Bobwhite damage.  The lighter shot load means few pellets, the #9 shots runs out of energy in a shorter distance, and the full choke lowers the area of the pattern.
  Best,
  Mike
 
 
 
  
Last edited by AmarilloMike; 11/02/11 09:18 AM.
 
 
  
 I am glad to be here.
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Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
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I only intended to hit one and the rest were behind the targeted bird.  I shot several more inadverdent "doubles" on that trip, usually on Sharptails.
  My current thinking is that 3/4 ounces of #9 shot out of a modified or full choke might be the optimum combination when trying to limit "collateral" Bobwhite damage. Our thinking certainly changes over the years.  When wild bobwhites were all we hunted around here in South GA, I was thrilled with any "collateral damage" I was lucky enough to get on a covey rise...Geo  
 
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Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
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Posts: 15,462 Likes: 89  | 
Pa I hunted all around Grand Junction Tennessee when we had wild quail with some of the finest dogs in the land.....quail hunting without a dog is stupid at best. 
 
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Posts: 15,462 Likes: 89  
Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
Joined:  Jan 2006 
Posts: 15,462 Likes: 89  | 
 My current thinking is that 3/4 ounces of #9 shot out of a modified or full choke might be the optimum combination
 
 Might be if you didn't intend to eat them.  
 
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Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
Joined:  Dec 2008 
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Pa I hunted all around Grand Junction Tennessee when we had wild quail with some of the finest dogs in the land.....quail hunting without a dog is stupid at best.  jOe....I guess if you hunt in the dense leafy woody woods of humidville America, then you need the help......F.Y.I., as an example, about 85% + of Arizona/Southern Utah Gambel's quail hunters do NOT use dogs.............. in fact, read some of Jack O'Conner's old quail stories from AZ or Mexico and look for a dog anywhere in his many quail stories, and you will see this is nothing new...............I know you've never experienced this or seen it or understand it, but it's always been that way in the Southwest........if you walked the land, understood the birds habits and manuevered around the Cholla jumping cactus you would know why...........this is why "we still have" wild native quail........ Since quail nest on the ground, Roadrunners eat their fair share of quail eggs in the Southwest during nesting, as do some other pests....... I lived in Southern Arizona for over 25 years and there was no whistle blowing going on during either of the two quail seasons......FYI.....some of the open grass valleys around Patagonia along the border with Mexico accomodates dogs o.k., but the native desert country is NOT dog friendly............ this is not Tennesse, Georgia or Kansas....  
 
  
Doug
 
 
  
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Sidelock 
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Sidelock 
 
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My shooting/hunting perceptions and skills have changed dramatically over the years. When I started hunting at age 12 and up to about age 35 (It's embarrassing to write this), I was mostly an unsuccessful sky blaster for waterfowl and a 3 shot no matter what for upland game.  Friends an mentors took me under their wings and changed my whole hunting/shooting perspective. One guy took me skeet shooting and after a while had me shooting low gun to simulate hunting conditions. Another friend taught me to call ducks and geese to within easy shooting range and as as result of what those two guy taught me I became a successful hunter and not just a bad shot and bird crippler.  They also taught me that 1 1/4 oz. of lead, when lead was legal is more than enough for both ducks and geese.  I shoot pheasant, Huns, sharp tail and blue and ruff grouse with 3/4 oz. loads.  I spend a lot of time on my pattern board when I'm attempting to evaluate a new load or perfecting an old one.  A person can use as much shot and gun that they feel is necessary, but crippling birds at extreme ranges makes no sense to me and in the case of waterfowl, when you learn to call close shots are the norm.    Does crippling birds at  CLOSE range make more sense?   Crippling ducks, or any other gamebird that may be occasionally shot at a longer distance, is not exclusive of short range shooting.    SRH  Good grief, how did you get that I endorse short range crippling? My point is: Know what is coming out of your barrel(s) and how effective it is at the distances you shoot; all of which can be accomplished by pattern and penetration tests.   When you know your barrel(s)/loads and their effective ranges, crippling can be held to a minimum.  
 
  
Jim
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