I started rolling my own in 1965-66 and my first caliber was a .22 K-Hornet. Fire forming was easy. Next came the .256 win Mag. Had a Contender with a 10" octagon bbl. Like you, I killed many beer cans and crows with it. I tried several different bullets (brand and weight) but found the Hornady 60 HP was the best bullet for my Contender. Don't remember the powder, but it seems like it was the same I used in the K-hornet. I got into the AI following and was loading 4 or 5 different calibers plus lots of .38's and .44"s and I almost forgot .410, 28, 20, 12 shotgun shells.. I got into the routine of load and go to the range. Tweak my loads and go to the range. One day I realized that I used to go to the range or out in the woods to plink a few rounds of .22 RF's and how much fun that was. I would buy a brick of what ever was on sale at J.C. Penney, when they were big into shooting sports, and go have some fun. I quit handloading except for breech seating my Scheutzen, Jr. and Stevens 47, both in .32-40. Even those are gone, much to my regret. I still have my first .22, a Remington 512 with a Weaver 4X scope my dad sold me for a penny in 1952. A lot of guns have gone through my hands and I regret selling or trading every one of them. Well, this conversation has gotten off track, but I'm going to study on another .256 Win Mag in an older model Contender with a 10" octagon barrel. Maybe find me a used press and some dies, brass, bullets, powder and that first round is going to cost me $800-900. LOL