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Old 09-01-2018 | 11:05 AM
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Erno86
Nontypical Buck
 
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From: Marriottsville, Maryland
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Originally Posted by Roeyourboat
Greetings, folks! I'm currently writing up the first draft of a fictional book and i'm in need of your expertise. I've spent several months researching various aspects of the story whereby I have no experience, and with regards to hunting, I'm at some loss. If anyone knowledgeable enough could help answer some of my questions, I'd sure appreciate it.A part of the story is set somewhere in the great outdoors of America, this area is home to Roe, Fallow, Red deer, and bears. The deer are predominantly the chosen diet of the hunters and my questions revolve around them. A good place to start would be:

How many days/weeks could you live off a killed adult male Roe? Assuming you carry out all the required prep of the meat after the fact?

Any tips or links on how to appropriately store your kill? Assuming that you have very little access to modern tools.

Another question I'm indecisive on is what calibre rifle weapon is best for shooting deer and bear? It should be understood that the hunters only have 1 weapon and so being at disadvantage isn't necessarily a bad thing, so long as they could hunt deer successfully and defend against a bear maul.

I have an instance where the rifle misfires, though the primer is dented. Can anyone technically explain why that could happen? Excluding the rifle being cleaned properly.

On average, how long might it take, in terms of shots fired, for a person to begin to go deaf if they didn't use any ear protection? I understand that people generally follow strict safety precautions but somewhere in the ball park would be good as an educated guess.

I have more questions but I'll leave these up for now. Again, I appreciate any wisdom this community may have around these questions. Cheers!
For the proper aging process: After gutting...use a block an tackle to suspend a skin on gutted deer from a rear leg hook in the air, in a room that is under 50 degrees(?) fahrenheit for a certain amount of days (four or five?)

I would tend to say...using 6.5 caliber premium bullets on up to the 375 range is suitable for deer and bear; though a 375 is overkill for deer, but not for big antelope in Africa --- Though, shoot what you can shoot best. I use a 30-06 SAKO bolt rifle for deer or bear and a custom Belgium Mauser bolt rifle, in 338 Winchester magnum for bear or elk.

It's been said..."that a click instead of a bang is the loudest sound in the woods." One reason could be excess oil inside the bolt, where the oil would seep into a primer from the bolt and compromise detonation. Another primer failure would be excess oil inside the bolt in a cold climate, where the oil would make the firing pin sluggish. Try removing all oil from the inside of the bolt, before you go hunting again.

One shot --- without hearing protection --- can damage a person's hearing. That's why I use amplified hearing protection headphones, while on most of my small and big game hunting jaunts. The muffs amplify hearing up to 125%, with a hearing cutoff, during a muzzle blast, from a firearm.

Last edited by Erno86; 09-01-2018 at 11:14 AM. Reason: added a few words
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