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highlands hunter...
Posted: Mon May 26, 2008 1:08 pm
Guest
After several years of saying that she disliked the taste of Canada
goose, a few new recipes (and some donated goose meat) has given me
the green-light from my wife to hunt geese.

As I'm a newbie to goose hunting I would like to know if a 20 ga. with
3" would have enough power to drop a goose?

Thanks for your help.

Scott
Steve at (no spam) OutdoorFrontiers...
Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 6:49 am
Guest
"highlands hunter" <highlands_hunter at (no spam) ROGERS.COM> wrote in message
news:15d7fb1a-a626-4fe6-91ba-3254a188ad74 at (no spam) u12g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
Quote:
After several years of saying that she disliked the taste of Canada
goose, a few new recipes (and some donated goose meat) has given me
the green-light from my wife to hunt geese.

As I'm a newbie to goose hunting I would like to know if a 20 ga. with
3" would have enough power to drop a goose?

Thanks for your help.

Scott

Hi Scott,

Yes, a 20 ga. will drop a goose, I used one all the time when I was a kid.
But you'll have to remember to let the geese get in closer and be more
accurate.

Is there any reason why not a 12 gauge?
--
Steve at (no spam) OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com
celtex...
Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 9:29 am
Guest
"highlands hunter" <highlands_hunter at (no spam) ROGERS.COM> wrote in message
news:15d7fb1a-a626-4fe6-91ba-3254a188ad74 at (no spam) u12g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
Quote:
After several years of saying that she disliked the taste of Canada
goose, a few new recipes (and some donated goose meat) has given me
the green-light from my wife to hunt geese.

As I'm a newbie to goose hunting I would like to know if a 20 ga. with
3" would have enough power to drop a goose?

Thanks for your help.

Scott

The main difference in the 20 and 12 is the amount of shot put in the air.
Although there is some velocity difference the main disadvantage of the 20
is shot load. Saying that I too like Steve used a 20ga for everything, a
bolt action Mossberg!, lol. And it dropped a many of birds and rabbits as
well as waterfowl of every type, including several Geese. The 12 will give
you more margin of error on the bigger birds though.
Jim
highlands hunter...
Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 2:45 pm
Guest
On May 27, 7:49 am, "Steve at (no spam) OutdoorFrontiers" <go-
fish... at (no spam) charter.net> wrote:
Quote:
"highlands hunter" <highlands_hun... at (no spam) ROGERS.COM> wrote in message

news:15d7fb1a-a626-4fe6-91ba-3254a188ad74 at (no spam) u12g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

After several years of saying that she disliked the taste of Canada
goose, a few new recipes (and some donated goose meat) has given me
the green-light from my wife to hunt geese.

As I'm a newbie to goose hunting I would like to know if a 20 ga. with
3" would have enough power to drop a goose?

Thanks for your help.

Scott

Hi Scott,

Yes, a 20 ga. will drop a goose, I used one all the time when I was a kid.
But you'll have to remember to let the geese get in closer and be more
accurate.

Is there any reason why not a 12 gauge?
--
Steve at (no spam) OutdoorFrontiershttp://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rodshttp://www.herefishyfishy.com

Thanks for the info. I have goose hunting friends that claim that
nothing but a 12 ga with 31/2" shells should be used on geese, and
another friend who uses a 28 ga on ducks (and drops them like wet
rags). The reason I asked is because I own a 20 ga, not a 12 ga.
highlands hunter...
Posted: Thu May 29, 2008 11:59 am
Guest
On May 27, 10:29 am, celtex <rs... at (no spam) HOTMAIL.COM> wrote:
Quote:
"highlands hunter" <highlands_hun... at (no spam) ROGERS.COM> wrote in message

news:15d7fb1a-a626-4fe6-91ba-3254a188ad74 at (no spam) u12g2000prd.googlegroups.com...

After several years of saying that she disliked the taste of Canada
goose, a few new recipes (and some donated goose meat) has given me
the green-light from my wife to hunt geese.

As I'm a newbie to goose hunting I would like to know if a 20 ga. with
3" would have enough power to drop a goose?

Thanks for your help.

Scott

The main difference in the 20 and 12 is the amount of shot put in the air.
Although there is some velocity difference the main disadvantage of the 20
is shot load. Saying that I too like Steve used a 20ga for everything, a
bolt action Mossberg!, lol. And it dropped a many of birds and rabbits as
well as waterfowl of every type, including several Geese. The 12 will give
you more margin of error on the bigger birds though.
Jim

Thanks Jim,

I like the 20 ga as its fast to shoulder and easy to carry. I've used
my 870 Express alot for hares and have been very hapy with it.
Hopefully with some guidance from my goose hunting friends I'll have
some goose for maiking sausage next fall!
Karlos...
Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2008 11:30 pm
Guest
On Thu, 29 May 2008 09:59:58 -0700, highlands hunter
<highlands_hunter at (no spam) ROGERS.COM> wrote:

Quote:
On May 27, 10:29 am, celtex <rs... at (no spam) HOTMAIL.COM> wrote:
"highlands hunter" <highlands_hun... at (no spam) ROGERS.COM> wrote in message

news:15d7fb1a-a626-4fe6-91ba-3254a188ad74 at (no spam) u12g2000prd.googlegroups.com....

After several years of saying that she disliked the taste of Canada
goose, a few new recipes (and some donated goose meat) has given me
the green-light from my wife to hunt geese.

As I'm a newbie to goose hunting I would like to know if a 20 ga. with
3" would have enough power to drop a goose?

Thanks for your help.

Scott

The main difference in the 20 and 12 is the amount of shot put in the air.
Although there is some velocity difference the main disadvantage of the 20
is shot load. Saying that I too like Steve used a 20ga for everything, a
bolt action Mossberg!, lol. And it dropped a many of birds and rabbits as
well as waterfowl of every type, including several Geese. The 12 will give
you more margin of error on the bigger birds though.
Jim

Thanks Jim,

I like the 20 ga as its fast to shoulder and easy to carry. I've used
my 870 Express alot for hares and have been very hapy with it.
Hopefully with some guidance from my goose hunting friends I'll have
some goose for maiking sausage next fall!

On the final weekend of the 2006-7 waterfowl season at Gray Lodge
Wildlife Area in California, which had been very productive, I had a
swollen sense of self and went out into the marsh with my ancient
Italian O/U 20, with a box of 10 very old 2 3/4" bismuth #4s. I shot
two doubles of teal and widgeon and then the morning flight ended.
Getting a little itchy, I decided to create my own luck with a lengthy
jump shoot. About 20 minutes in, two specks lifted off about 15 yards
away. I quickly recovered and aimed at the first bird, shot, and then
shot at the second. I saw feathers fly and just assumed they would
fall out of the sky. As they honked and flew every higher and
further...I knew right then and there: don't bring a 20 to a goose
hunt. At least, I shouldn't.

I'm pretty sure those birds survived. My shots did not hit any wing
bone and the shot probably didn't get very far through the winter
plummage and fat. My sense of self was pretty deflated after that.

HOWEVER: if you have a modern 20 ga. autoloader or pump that shoots 3"
high-tech matrix or hevyshot or tungsten, I'll bet you could knock a
goose down pretty well. You just have to make your 1 1/8 oz of shot
count. I've shot a lot of geese with 12 ga 1 1/8 oz steel loads. But,
they were close. I always shoot close.

Karl
highlands hunter...
Posted: Thu Jun 05, 2008 9:29 am
Guest
On Jun 4, 12:30 am, Karlos <karl.saa... at (no spam) COMCAST.NET> wrote:
Quote:
On Thu, 29 May 2008 09:59:58 -0700, highlands hunter





highlands_hun... at (no spam) ROGERS.COM> wrote:
On May 27, 10:29 am, celtex <rs... at (no spam) HOTMAIL.COM> wrote:
"highlands hunter" <highlands_hun... at (no spam) ROGERS.COM> wrote in message

news:15d7fb1a-a626-4fe6-91ba-3254a188ad74 at (no spam) u12g2000prd.googlegroups.com....

After several years of saying that she disliked the taste of Canada
goose, a few new recipes (and some donated goose meat) has given me
the green-light from my wife to hunt geese.

As I'm a newbie to goose hunting I would like to know if a 20 ga. with
3" would have enough power to drop a goose?

Thanks for your help.

Scott

The main difference in the 20 and 12 is the amount of shot put in the air.
Although there is some velocity difference the main disadvantage of the 20
is shot load. Saying that I too like Steve used a 20ga for everything, a
bolt action Mossberg!, lol. And it dropped a many of birds and rabbits as
well as waterfowl of every type, including several Geese. The 12 will give
you more margin of error on the bigger birds though.
Jim

Thanks Jim,

I like the 20 ga as its fast to shoulder and easy to carry.  I've used
my 870 Express alot for hares and have been very hapy with it.
Hopefully with some guidance from my goose hunting friends I'll have
some goose for maiking sausage next fall!

On the final weekend of the 2006-7 waterfowl season at Gray Lodge
Wildlife Area in California, which had been very productive, I had a
swollen sense of self and went out into the marsh with my ancient
Italian O/U 20, with a box of 10 very old 2 3/4" bismuth #4s. I shot
two doubles of teal and widgeon and then the morning flight ended.
Getting a little itchy, I decided to create my own luck with a lengthy
jump shoot. About 20 minutes in, two specks lifted off about 15 yards
away. I quickly recovered and aimed at the first bird, shot, and then
shot at the second. I saw feathers fly and just assumed they would
fall out of the sky. As they honked and flew every higher and
further...I knew right then and there: don't bring a 20 to a goose
hunt.  At least, I shouldn't.

I'm pretty sure those birds survived. My shots did not hit any wing
bone and the shot probably didn't get very far through the winter
plummage and fat.  My sense of self was pretty deflated after that.

HOWEVER: if you have a modern 20 ga. autoloader or pump that shoots 3"
high-tech matrix or hevyshot or tungsten, I'll bet you could knock a
goose down pretty well.  You just have to make your 1 1/8 oz of shot
count. I've shot a lot of geese with 12 ga 1 1/8 oz steel loads. But,
they were close. I always shoot close.

Karl- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Good point. Know your gin and its limitations - with skeet first if
possible!
SaPeIsMa...
Posted: Fri Jun 06, 2008 4:41 pm
Guest
"highlands hunter" <highlands_hunter at (no spam) ROGERS.COM> wrote in message
news:0b3f27e2-2965-4344-b271-c257a42f5fa1 at (no spam) w8g2000prd.googlegroups.com...
#
# Good point. Know your gin and its limitations -
# with skeet first if possible!

The only limitation on my gin is my ability to absorb it without falling out
of my chair.
Smile
Never tried gin with skeet. I usually have it with Bitter Lemon
What does gin with skeet taste like ?
Smile)
Chris Barnes...
Posted: Mon Jun 09, 2008 9:59 am
Guest
SaPeIsMa wrote:
Quote:
Never tried gin with skeet. I usually have it with Bitter Lemon
What does gin with skeet taste like ?
Smile)

It's a little fishy.

Oh wait - you said "skeet", not "skate".
Never mind.

--

+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Chris Barnes AOL IM: CNBarnes
chris at (no spam) txbarnes.com Yahoo IM: chrisnbarnes
"Usenet really is all about standing around and hitting the ground
with clubs, on a spot where many years earlier a dead horse lay."
 
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