Not super familiar with big hip iron but caliber and shroud suggest Taurus. I wonder if he was using a rifle of equal "quality"
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On dangerous game hunts, and even regular hunts, you can quickly go from the "hunter" to "the hunted." I always think of my hunting firearms in terms of their defensive attributes. A 1301 or Benelli with an Aimpoint and a tube full of Brenneke slugs would have been a great second long gun on that hunt.
And while I don't know the Alaskan bear hunting rules, I'd bet the guide is only not allowed to shoot the bear during the hunt... Once there is a life in danger I'm sure all the rules are lifted.
Or you shoot the charging bear and then hand your rifle to the hunter.
A guide can certainly DLP a bear but an actual paid guide would have a hard time explaining how his/her hunter shot a bear 3 times from 480 yards then got charged.
Best advice I ever got was that just because a bear is coming at you doesn't mean it's charging. Bears will take the path of least resistance when fleeing and if you're standing in that path you're getting run over and probably mauled on the way through. Move. Right angles so you can keep an eye on it, even if it's uphill through shit country. Hairless apes are better at that than bears especially when they're scared.
So I'm not a hunter... Out of curiosity can you tell me what mistakes were made?
It's obvious to me that they didn't have enough hardware with them. I would expect both people to have a rifle or shotgun and both people to have a Large caliber sidearm as a back up.
What other mistakes were made?
Was the rifle underpowered for the bear?
It also seems the shot placement was suspect, seeing as it didn't seem to even slow the bear down. And jamming the rifle seems like an especially FUBAR moment.