You thinking about CR111? Regardless, you are right, you have to be willing to get off the road and two-tracks a couple miles and be willing and able to hauling them back out.
Both 9 and 10 have lots of national forest and no wilderness. I've hunted 9. This thread is 2 years old now, and it burnt in 2020, so give it a few years and it should have some lovely forage. The pine beetles made it nearly impassable in 2019 and you couldn't hunt in 9 during 2020 due to the fire
I'm concerned about the constant creep on gun rights. Was 0 days, then 3, soon 30, then what? No appeal probably. Sherriff's discretion? Single shots only? Back to muzzleloaders, but only 32 caliber?
This issue here is really a staffing issue with FBI and courts. They have the data. They...
I'm actually going to scout that area this summer. Its rugged on the west side, a bit less so on the east. Type 1 success is about 60%. It sounds viable.
In Wyo, if its flat and there is public ground, you are good to go. There are even goats in hills. Just make sure you have lots of ground to cover and some good binoculars. I can't tell you how many times I've looked across the countryside and saw nothing until I put my binos up.
Based on what you wrote, a 243 Winchester would fit the bill. With a 100 gr Partition, this is a potent round that still caries 1000 foot pounds of energy to 350 yards. Mine is a mountain weight Howa 1500. And its perfect for coyotes.
I'm
I'm planning on switching from the 140 gr AC to the 142 ACLR this fall if I can get my hands on them. I'm putting a new McGowen 1:8 on it, a bit heavier barrel than factory, and some shiny new Lapua brass, and a new Bushnell Nitro MOA Deploy reticle 4-16x44 to pair with it. I hunt an area...