Thoughts on the .22LR as a survival rifle…
Following up on a comment made on the bug out truck thread that a 12G and a .22LR is all you are going to need/end up with….
Background- As a kid growing up in Rhodesia we could get a license for a .22 rimfire rifle when we were 12 years old and a .22 handgun when we were 14. (We could license a centre fire rifle at 14 and a hand gun at 16). Every kid owned one, and those, like me, who lived out of town but were not ‘boarders (ie staying at the school hostel) carried our firearms to school every day. We had shooting practice twice a week anyway. I think there was hardly any rural kid that did not own a .22 and did not get it licensed in his own name (so he could carry it in public without a parent being present) as soon as he was old enough.
As a police Forensic ‘s officer I have picked up and carried out autopsies on quite a few people who died from a .22LR round. Most were suicide or murder (where the victim could be shot in the head at close range) but the odd other – like a kid shooting at a dove, bullet ricocheting and killing another kid playing 150m away at right angles to the direction the bullet was fired in.
Thoughts…We all soon learned that a .22LR would not kill a guinea fowl from side on- you had to take a going away shot…but you could do the same with a decent air rifle! Abet from longer range with the .22. It was also interesting to see the scramble for .22mag rifles and revolvers once the war stated getting ‘hotter’. I was one of the fortunate ones. I had an F,N, .22LR single shot that was perfect for ‘open sights’ competitions which we shot at school and a Bruno (now CZ) .22mag for carry . I also had a high standard ‘double nine’ with a .22mag cylinder. .22mag ammo was expensive. 5-6 times the price of eley club .22LR and still 3 times the price of .22LR high velocity…but ‘combat experience’ made it worth it for mine and many other parents. The main limiting factor in the .22LR from a rifle was trajectory…Beyond 100m it has a trajectory like a mortar and in fleeting contacts or shooting at multiple attackers from the windows of a farm house…who remembers to judge range and adjust sights for every shot? The Army has a hard time getting trained troops to adjust sights let alone civilians. The .22mag has a true 150m effective range – sure a good shot can stretch this by careful range estimation (I love my leupold range finder) , but if the rifle is zeroed at 125m you can freely engage anything from point blank out to 150 without thinking about range. For hunting that isn’t so true…especially smaller stuff where 4” high or low can spell a miss or wound.
When it comes to killing power…the .22LR is certainly lethal but not hugely effective. Many a kid has taken a duiker or jackal with his .22 but I think we probably lost a dozen or so wounded for every one killed. There are always exceptions….the kid from next door killed three gooks one night with his single shot .22LR including the section leader who was armed with an RPD light machinegun. The gooks surprised the house and managed to put an RPG 7 into the main bedroom ( they climbed a tree on a small nearby hill so they could get the rocket over the security fence instead of the usual practice of trying to cut a hole in the fence which inevitably triggered the alarm and switched on the outside security lights) as the first indication of the attack. The miner was critically wounded and his wife badly cut up by flying glass. The second rocket blew the front door open. 8 year old kid grabbed his .22 and ran out of the back door as the attack came in. Kneeling by the corner of the house and using the (now triggered) security lights to aim by he cut down the section leader and two other AK armed gooks…all one shot kills. In the mean time his mother had come looking for him and run to the blown front door…where two gooks were shooting at the kid at the corner of the house…they should have been looking inside because she had an Uzi. With five dead the gooks gave up.
Still, the hard test of actual use showed that the .22mag was far, far superior as an anti personnel weapon to the .22LR, giving a much higher hit probability and much better as a hunting tool. As soon as we could many of us ‘upgraded’. Being a big kid, I got a 7x57 for my 14th Birthday…many others went to a .22 Hornet or, if they already had a .22 Mag, stuck with that until they were big enough to handle something more meaningful. Certainly no kid stayed with a .22LR after his 14th Birthday except for target and training use.
As a parting thought….the PRIMARY survival firearm is a HANDGUN…as has been proved time and time again by farmers, miners, parks and vet services men (and women) across Africa, you cannot have a rifle in your hands at all times and you cannot retain a full 360º look out when you are concentrating on a difficult task - or asleep. It is also often difficult to operate a long gun when injured. Considering how anaemic most handgun rounds are a .22LR is hardly worth considering. A NAA .22mag with adjustable sights might be useful in some circumstances (I love mine when travelling in south Africa)…but in general- you need something more. I have NEEDED a handgun 4 times- The night I was shot in the right shoulder (bad guy fired 15-18 rounds at me from a distance of 3 paces with his AK and hit me once. I fired one shot with my .41 mag, left handed and problem went away) , the night I woke up with a Hyaena standing on me (.41 was on a lanyard round my neck), the day I rode into an elephant on my motorbike (I was watching a jackal for signs of Rabies and got to absorbed to notice a 5 ton grey thing in the road…ele didn’t like me running into his leg but cleared off when I fired a warning shot past his ear) and the day I was riding back to the station and a lion decided to chase me ( I had a rifle but couldn’t access it and the road was so bad I couldn’t ride faster than about 25-30 MPH...) . I was also very grateful of the handgun on other occasions…changing a wheel on the truck one night when all the hair on my back stood up…I looked round but could see nothing…swept the bush with the torch and there, lying in the grass about 5 paces away was a lioness just watching me..she didn’t try anything but if she had, there is no way I could have got my rifle into action even though it was propped up on the side of the truck just inches from my hand.
Also, the san Bushmen often have a firearm in each group…they would never use it for hunting- the bow is much more efficient – but simply for security. The most desirable firearm they can get is an old Brit .455 revolver- you would be amazed at how much work you can get for a box of shells for one of them. Handguns are totally illegal in Botswana and so the few that are in circulation are very highly prised.
And lastly…the 8 year old kid who killed three gooks was killed on his 16th birthday..in a different civil war, because he could not get his rifle into action quickly enough while riding home from school. I got to pick up his body and go and tell his folks.