I don't try to hide it, it is out of sight in a belt pouch. I carry cross draw so it is on my left side so it is not where gun shy hikers expect to see a gun carried. The addition of bear spray on my right hip completes the camouflage.Wallowa said:Now Jim I will challenge that a .44 mag can be "hidden from sight".. I am also a fan of the .44 [which is not light for a reason] and of course many others!
My revolver is 35 oz loaded.
The hottest load for a .357 handgun I could find is 200 gr. jacketed bullet loaded with 12.4 gr. of W296 giving a muzzle energy of ~790 ft.lbf.dharte said:I'm not a gun expert but I believe a .357 magnum will have deeper penetration and it's easier to shoot and more accurate than a .44 magnum.
Same weight bullet for .44 mag loaded with 26 gr of H110 yields 1448 ft.lbf of energy (almost double).
What I carry: 300 gr. jacketed bullet loaded with 19 gr. of N-110 = a muzzle energy of 1492 ft.lbf.
I go with the most energy I can deliver on target.
A charging bear needs to be hit in the head to stop it and its skull is thick. You need to hit it as hard as you can. I good body shot will kill a bear but not immediately and guess what it will be doing in the minutes it takes for it to bleed out. You want a non-expanding bullet for penetration (of that hard head).
The biggest determiner of what caliber to take is: what is the biggest gun I can shoot accurately? A .357 one is comfortable with is better than a .44 Mag you are scared to practice with. When under high stress you will repeat what you practice.
jim