An Interesting Informative Video's, On Carrying / Selecting Survival Arms

Grumpy

The Grumpy Grease Monkey mechanical engineer.
Staff member
while I don't agree with every thing posted the vast majority of info is very good and worth watching carefully.
the idea of carrying two distinctly different weapons with sufficient matching ammo ,for both, makes a great deal of sense if you'll be days away from resupply sources.

I personally strongly suggest you think things through, and carry a decent day pack.
think keep, warm, dry, have the ability to start a fire, boil and carry water, minimal emergency shelter under all conditions and for damn sure carry significant extra ammo and a full size blade.
Id generally suggest anyone who intends to spend 2- 3 days or more camping/hunting in wilderness areas, carry a decently powerful hunting rifle or handgun,
with at least 20 plus cartridges in protective packaging,
and an accurate 22lr or larger caliber handgun with a full box of 22lr or matching handgun ammo
Ive carried either a stainless 22lr S&W 6" revolver or my 10.5/8" 44 mag revolver on must 3-5 day back pack trips

for many dozens of past back packing trips into rugged and remote Colorado canyons,
I had selected my favorite thick timber hunting tool, my sako 375 H&H carbine, which Id always found to be a great choice in the narrow canyon country, tools like a KUKRI knife, warm sleeping bag and water proof tarp, are minimum starter contents in a back pack.
my 375 H&H carbines loaded with 270 grain spire points over a stiff load of WW760 and a 215 fed primer or my 44 mag revolver as the primary hunting arm, loaded with 300 grain hard cast bullets over 21 grains of H110
sako375man.jpg

https://gundigest.com/gear-ammo/ammunition/handloading-375-hh-magnum








related threads

http://garage.grumpysperformance.co...he-basic-equipment-required.15119/#post-86156

http://garage.grumpysperformance.com/index.php?threads/back-packs.2809/#post-72534
 
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