223 is legal in a few states, and it'll work, but it's iffy. In my youth, when it was still a new cartridge, I came across a buddy in the woods who'd killed a sow with several well-placed shots from his 223, but not before she ran him into the bed of his pickup and put a pretty good dent in the tailgate. And there's always the possibility it won't penetrate at all, so it's best to be near a tree you can climb if you're going to take on a big boar hog or get between a sow and her pigs.
2007-11-20 04:15:37
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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A "perfect" hit will of course drop an animal fairly quickly. If I were starving, I sure would use what I had to feed the family. Having said that, with a .223 you have to make sure you don't use full metal jacketed ammo as it won't work well on animals, not expanding properly. Also, hollow points might work on a deer, but not on a hog. I'd use soft points for bets results. Also, a .223 is not legal in some states for hunting. My brother hit a fair sized buck with a .223. He hit a little high and back. He wasn't much good at tracking and lost the blood trail after about 150 yards. He drove down the mountain and got me. We went back and trailed that deer for a full day, that animal was suffering the whole time. We finally got a chance to finish it off with one shot from my .270 the next morning. Would I shoot a hog with it?? me personnally? no chance. Those are some tough and mean critters. I've shot them with both handgun and rifle, but no, I would not use a light .223 on them unless they were a smaller hog.
Possible to hunt with the .223?? yes, recommended??? No
2007-11-20 04:28:34
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answer #2
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answered by randy 7
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The answer is yes, of course a .223 will kill a large deer or pig. Shot placement aside, let's talk about something that is really important: A hunter's responsibility.
Shot placement is critical anytime you hunt. But hunters are always under scrutiny. A hunter also must always use enough gun to humanely take the game he is hunting. A .223 is NOT a deer gun. It is a varmint caliber. The largest acceptable game would be the Peccary, known down south as the javalina. It is also good for gobblers if you can make a neck shot. Deer? No, it doesn't kill them fast enough.
In 1979 I was hunting with some other hunters in South Texas. One of the hunters had just bought an AR-15. I told him I though it was too small for deer and he scoffed at me. He took one small deer and five pigs with single head shots. Then one morning we heard rapid-fire coming from the direction of his blind. We headed out his way and came up on one dead doe. He excitedly said to us that he had just shot the biggest Whitetail deer he had ever seen. It was a trophy buck running with five does (one of which he accidently killed) and it had a Boone & Crockett rack. The neck was completely swollen and he popped it twice in the neck with his AR-15, but the buck just ran off carrying his head ****** to one side. Five of us searched for that buck until 10:00 p.m. that night finding tantalizing patches of blood here and there and once startling the buck which ran before it could be shot with a proper deer rifle. Long story short, we NEVER FOUND THAT TROPHY BUCK.
The next day my friend took out his old tried-n-true Remington 700 ADL in .270 Winchester and never brought that 2-2-3 back to deer camp again. Which is only one reason why I advocate: Always use enough gun. Bullet placement goes without saying. For this reason we have deer rifles, buffalo guns and elephant guns. Hunters are always being criticized. Don't give the antis anymore ammunition. Use enough gun and bring home the bacon, venison or whatever it is you may be hunting.
Best.
H
2007-11-20 07:10:48
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answer #3
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answered by H 7
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223 Hunting Rifle
2016-10-04 07:10:30
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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A heart or head shot with a 223 will put down a deer or pig as fast as anything else would. I'd get closer and be certain of switching off the animal with that one good shot. If you get back in to the lungs or liver then the animal is going to take hours or days to die.
A 223 on a big animal will typically leave no exit wound and the bleeding will mostly be internal. If you are intending the usual lazy 'somewhere in the vitals' shot then you are condemning an animal to a slow and private death.
How about trading your 223 for something that makes a bigger hole?
2007-11-20 03:42:19
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answer #5
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answered by Chris H 6
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Short answer is yes, a properly place bullet from a .223 Remington will cleanly take a deer or a pig if the shot is placed perfectly. The largest Brown Bear ever taken in Alaska was killed by a native girl with a 22 rimfire do it can be done, just not the best choice.
2007-11-20 03:05:03
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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223 Hog Hunting
2016-12-16 09:58:34
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answer #7
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answered by beckim 3
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The short answer is yes you could. As others have said, not the best choice and shooting deer with a .223 is illegal in most states so check in your state to confirm you can hunt big game with this cartridge.
I once shot a huge pig in LA with an AR-15 when stationed there and killed it with a lung/heart shot. It still ran for about 300 yards. (Didn't know it was dead because their blood flows so slowly I guess) So it can be done, but if you can beg or borrow a friend or family members larger caliber your chances are much better to drop an animal with one humane shot.
Good luck hunting.
2007-11-20 03:27:54
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answer #8
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answered by gunguy58 3
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Yes it can kill them both. The .223 is a pretty versatile caliber. I killed a hog with a .22 hornet hollow point. It stumbled probably three yards bfor it fell dead.
For deer, the .223 is small. Its fast and accurate. IT hits hard. Howevewr, its too small. It will work very well on hogs and anything smaller.
Also, as H said, shot placement is one of the biggest responsibilities of a hunter. Its very inhumane to shoot an animal and expect it to die on its own time. A hunter has a responsibility to make a good clean shot and kill the animal as quick as possible, making it painless for the animal. If you dont, then your not a hunter, just a murderer. Its hunting, not killing. Big difference.
Get ur ethics straite bfor u pull the trigger....
BCKSHOT
2007-11-20 10:11:57
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answer #9
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answered by Tyler G 1
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I had a .222 rifle when I was a kid, cut down w/ a scope. I could
shoot anything, coyotes, varmints, but deer too. Last time I used
it I was home from college, hunting on my parent's lease. Before
I got comfy a nice buck ran out of the woods & stopped. I aimed
at the white spot on his throat, he fell like a sack of potatoes. That was about my last deer, may have shot a few more (to eat. )If you're a good shot it ain't even much sport. I was thinkin'
of killing one w/ an atl-atl. THAT'S incredibly hard, gives the deer the advantage!
2013-12-09 16:28:58
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answer #10
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answered by Bellycan 1
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