| I have done quite a but of walking around in what you would call a rain
forest and I think you will find that except around the edge of opening
in the canopy the vegitation at ground level is no more profuse than
the typical northern United States hardwood forest. Unless you plan on
shooting from the hip with your handgun I think you will find that a
nice short barrel shotgun will carry and better yet point in about the
same area in front of you. Try this take your hangun and aim it at the
wall then measure the distance from you chest to the tip of the barrel
you will probably find that this distance is close to 40 inches with a
6 inch revolver, now measure a short shotgun the same way it might just
surprise you. Keep in mind that you don't hold a shotgun away from your
body at arms reach to aim. BTW you will really appreciate a carry sling
on that shotgun.
The 12 gauge has more muzzle energy than any handgun that I know of
except some of the rifle calibers in TC Contenders and the like. If
your feral pigs are anything like ours size wise you and your dogs will
need that energy for quick clean kills a wounded pig ain't something I
want to follow into the most dense growth he can find but if you value
your dogs you will have to.
Most of the pigs I have shot have been done in while still-hunting for
whitetail deer for that style of hunting any of the heavier deer rifles
will do a very good job on pigs. If we here in this area intentionally
go after pigs in thick growth dogs and shotguns are the pick. Shots in
this style of hunting rarely are more than 30 yards very often at a
running target.
Ask your locals why that old 44-40 is not very effective if he says
that he has to shoot'em more than 1 time. I think you get where I am
going with this. Also ask some one in the armed services how hard it
is to carry a properly slung long-gun it the forest. If the sling is
adjusted so that the barrel does NOT stick up above your head it will
carry much easier.
Thank You,
Darrell
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| Ahhh Gi'day...
I've shot thousands of pigs. I think a .243 is ideal although
certainly at the low end of the range (this can be a controversial
opinion) and my experience suggests that a .308 with 150gn is too much.
This is for slightly smaller pigs than the 400 pound variety (that is
unless you hunt exclusively large tough old boars)
Anything in the .243 - .25'06 - 6.5 - .270 - 7mm-08 - .308 (light proj)
I think is ideal. Please avoid the tendancy to overgun, or have over
penetrating projectiles. I used a .243 for years, and never needed too
many second shots. Heavy .308s are too heavy, over penetrate, and
don't do enough damage.
With heavy timber you may want something a little slower and heavier.
Anybody I know who uses handguns uses a .357, but I've little
experience with that.
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