Just curious who here might have experience to share hunting waterfowl with an air shotgun
I appreciate all of the input, I normally use a 28 gauge and shoot 5/8 to an ounce loads including tss and bismuth. I think I’ll do some load/pattern/lethality testing if I do pick up a pcpThat's the thing. One would need a firefighters bottle on a pack frame to hope to have enough air to push an ounce or more of shot at a usable velocity. I still shoot some trap and used to load a lot of shotgun rounds for that pursuit. While it MAY be possible, practicality nixes it.
Have you shot tss in a pcp? I’m curious about it. I shoot bismuth and tss in my 28 gaugeHave you perchance seen the latest and greatest in shotgun ammo? Tungsten baby, often called TSS, Tungsten shot is a game changer. Tungsten shot is 1.7 times more dense than lead. It is also very hard and does not deform when fired, special thick shot cup type wads must be used to protect shotgun bores. Costly stuff @10 bucks a round or thereabouts. TSS has become the shizzle for turkey hunters, yup with the .410 bore shotgun. #9 TSS hits like #4 lead pellets, much greater downrange velocity thanks to that density. Yes 10 bucks a shell sounds nuts. Realistically, how much did we spend to get in to the field to chase that turkey? How many shots might we expend per day hunting turkeys? Less than one would be my guess if all hunters are considered and averaged. 10 bucks for the round that kills that turkey? Sign me up. The little .410 becomes a genuine killing machine, it is all in the ammo!
I work with someone that brings a slingshot and kills geese in the little pondJust curious who here might have experience to share hunting waterfowl with an air shotgun
Learn to shoot. When I moved to SC I was lucky enough to meet a family that had organized dove shoots on their land, big barbeque/party the whole nine yards and I was invited for years. My first time there, I was positioned to the left of an old ancient man that wasn't much more than a stick figure and looked to be about 200 years old. He sat in a chair with a shade umbrella and his iced tea. Limit was 12 that year if I remember right. Over the course of several hours he stood up 12 times, fired his single shot 410, and limited out. I fired two boxes of shells and was one short of a limit at end of day. That old man walked past me when shooting was over, said "son, too much gun, get a 410 single shot and learn how to shoot, you don't need any more to dove hunt". I wasn't the slightest bit offended, we became friends over the few years he had left before passing. It was his land we were hunting on. Turns out I was being evaluated to see if I would ever be invited again, the placing next to him was no accident. He must have approved of me as I was invited until he passed.My 410 barely kills anything
Definitely, his whole family were some of the best wing shooters I've ever seen in my life. It was his grandson that invited me, he apparently got in some hot water for that. I had picked up his grandson a couple weeks earlier on the side of a dirt road broke down, I was out scouting for the coming deer season. We figured out what was wrong, I drove him to an auto parts place and back, and we fixed his truck. Except me, the only non-family there could trace back their families ties to the owner's family for generations. The opening day dove shoot there was a family tradition since sometime in the 1800's.Excellent story karl! Beware of the old guy with just one gun, he very likely knows how to use it. I've moved on to a gas operated semi auto for 12 gauge, not age so much the neck surgery killed my recoil tolerance.
Where are you that a 308 Texan would be legal for swan? I've tagged several swans...didn't draw a tag this yearWatching this thread. I’ve been doing my research and interested in pbba pro, serpent arms 28 gauge, or Zeus .72
Just researching which is most capable. I really want SA 28g to be capable of ethical kills at a distance because of the amount of shots it can manage.
I got a tundra swan tag. I have a .308 Texan lss and a bow, but both of those seem like a challenge. I’m wondering how any of these three would do with such a big bird.