Diana LP-8 would be my recommendation.No air or CO2 to leak out. Accurate out to 15-20 yards.Mine loves the H&N Sniper Mediums(8.5 grain) -Y
Quote from: Yogi on March 29, 2022, 05:15:59 PMDiana LP-8 would be my recommendation.No air or CO2 to leak out. Accurate out to 15-20 yards.Mine loves the H&N Sniper Mediums(8.5 grain) -YWhen you mention your gun loves the Sniper Medium pellets, you might also want to mention that H&N no longer makes any of the Sniper line of pellets before a member decides to go trying to find some.
Quote from: SteveP-52 on March 29, 2022, 10:31:10 PMQuote from: Yogi on March 29, 2022, 05:15:59 PMDiana LP-8 would be my recommendation.No air or CO2 to leak out. Accurate out to 15-20 yards.Mine loves the H&N Sniper Mediums(8.5 grain) -YWhen you mention your gun loves the Sniper Medium pellets, you might also want to mention that H&N no longer makes any of the Sniper line of pellets before a member decides to go trying to find some.Bummer! I ddi not know. Glad I have a few tins...-Y
Quote from: Yogi on March 30, 2022, 08:04:08 AMQuote from: SteveP-52 on March 29, 2022, 10:31:10 PMQuote from: Yogi on March 29, 2022, 05:15:59 PMDiana LP-8 would be my recommendation.No air or CO2 to leak out. Accurate out to 15-20 yards.Mine loves the H&N Sniper Mediums(8.5 grain) -YWhen you mention your gun loves the Sniper Medium pellets, you might also want to mention that H&N no longer makes any of the Sniper line of pellets before a member decides to go trying to find some.Bummer! I ddi not know. Glad I have a few tins...-YH&N rep posted about it over on AGN. Worker somehow installed the dies wrong and they got damaged. H&N repaired them but when the pellets coming out didn't meet their quality standards, the decision was made to end the Sniper line of pellets.
Get a small 22lr pistol and use snake shot. I know this is an airgun forum but this is a safety issue. The snake shot cartridges carry lots of fine shot often called dust and will kill a snake at 5 to 7 yards. They also have enough spread that you're much more likely to hit them. The shot is so fine it loses energy rapidly and there's little chance of collateral damage past ten yards. They use it inside barns for pesting rodents and birds. I just bought property in AR and have been researching this very topic for my fiancée who loves to hike and garden and doesn't like snakes. Whatever weapon you choose, open sights are best if your eyes allow. Red dot next choice. Avoid magnification, it decreases your field of view and can delay your time to get on target. Not what you want when dealing with venomous snakes.
I 100% agree, but I'm talking mainly in a situation where firing a "real gun" could get me in trouble. In some places I go, nobody would ever know, but I need my trail gun to work for everywhere. Now if I got property like you, that would be exactly what I do...Not sure if the snake shot feeds in an automatic or if you need a revolver though?