GAME SHOOTING The single shot .22 pistol is much used in the United States for small game shooting for the pot, when camping out after big game. It does not make much noise and also has the advantage of being very portable. Game birds sometimes come close to a camp in the early morning or evening; and a sitting shot for the pot can be got at them without disturbing the ground, when a shotgun would clear all the ground for miles round. I find a .22 pistol has not enough stopping power to prevent a wounded rabbit getting to ground and consequently lost. A great proportion of rabbits hit with this bullet are lost. I use a .44 duelling pistol for rabbit stalking when they are sitting outside their holes. If a rabbit is hit by it he very seldom gets into his hole. The big bullet does not spoil the rabbit as much as might be thought, the bullet being round and solid it only makes a hole of its own size and goes straight through the rabbit. A .22 hollow pointed bullet makes much more It makes slightly more noise than a .22 pistol but it is a soft noise and does not travel far. I think when game for the pot has to be shot that a “.22 short” cartridge out of a rifle with a telescope sight is best. After all, hitting the bird at forty or fifty yards off with a pistol takes some doing, whereas with a telescopic sighted rifle the shot would be a certainty. The pistol is very little used for what seems to me to be a very useful function. When shooting big game there are many occasions when another shot has to be fired at wounded game unable to get away. Say a wild boar for instance is brought to bay by the first shot. He cannot be approached with safety to use the knife, he is killing the dogs, he has to be shot again. Now you do not want to fire your rifle, which makes a boom like a cannon, as that would disturb the rest of the beat. If you have a pistol which shoots a big .44 calibre ball with a reduced charge of powder you can go close up to the boar and kill him without making much noise. If a wounded animal gets you down, a pistol which lies close to your hand may save your life, A rifle can be lost in falling or lain on, the length of barrel prevents it being used at close quarters. The objection to carrying a pistol in big-game shooting is that every possible ounce in weight has to be saved, especially in a hot climate. The pistol is so much extra weight and when climbing amongst rocks it is a great nuisance. To be of any use against dangerous game the pistol must shoot a big bullet. In the instance of the wild boar, I mentioned a reduced charge but my idea is to carry the two sorts of cartridges and to have the automatic loaded with full charge cartridges, but if game has to be finished which is not endangering your life, I recommend putting in a gallery charge cartridge for this particular finishing shot so as not to make more noise than absolutely necessary, and not to disturb other game which may be near. An automatic pistol built for a big charge will not function with a reduced charge. Such a charge does not give enough recoil to introduce the next cartridge and an automatic only works properly with the exact load it is designed for. With a reduced charge the automatic pistol, after the shot, remains half open. If the magazine and also the cartridge which is in the barrel are first taken out, the gallery-load A single-shot .44 gallery ammunition pistol with very short barrel like the old-fashioned Derringer, could be carried without taking up any room or appreciable weight and be used for finishing deer, or other non-dangerous game. The forester who goes with me moufflon shooting carries a 9 Millimetre Mauser Automatic pistol for self-defence against poachers and he shoots small game with it when he comes across it. It is, however, a noisy little pistol. Do not take a smaller calibre pistol than a .38 for finishing big game. It does not kill them clear. |