The Indiana Natural Resources Commission will soon be holding hearings on a proposed change in DNR law that, commencing in the 2007 hunting season, permits hunters to use certain center-fire rifles to take Indiana deer. The proposed law as it is currently written will permit deer hunting with revolver cartridges like the .357 magnum, .41 magnum, .44 magnum and .45 Long Colt. There initially seems to be some fear about permitting rifle hunters to use "rifle" cartridges when they hunt, thus the current language of the law prohibiting full-powered rifle cartridges in any caliber. The final draft of this law has not been set in stone at this date.
I personally find this very curious, since for the last 10 years deer hunters in Indiana have been legally permitted to hunt with specialized "pistols" that fire just about any full-powered rifle cartridge you'd like. My hunting partner does excellent work out past 200 yards with a scoped-sighted Encore pistol in .308 caliber. I enjoy watching him cleanly and safely take whitetails with that rig, but the fact remains his .308 Encore fires a 150-grain .30 caliber Winchester Power Point with a
higher muzzle velocity and a greater range than a 150-grain Power point fired from my .30-30 Marlin. It sure seems ridiculous to exclude all rifle calibers from the above-described change in Indiana law, when the traditional deer rifle calibers like .30-30, .35 Remington, .444 Marlin and others pose no greater down-range hazard than rifles cartridges like .308 and .30-06 fired from a specialized pistol. Especially considering that the average whitetail hunter would likely shoot and hit more accurately with a shoulder-stocked .30 caliber rifle or carbine than he would with a .30 caliber "pistol".
If you have any feelings on this issue, please take a moment to contact Jennifer Kane, the public hearings officer with the Indiana Natural Resources Commission. She's looking for input from hunters and can be contacted by phone at: (317) 232-0156, or by e-mail at
www.jkane@nrc.in.gov, and she'll include your thoughts in the record. While you're at it, she can put you on the list to be notified of the public hearings to be held on this matter, probably beginning in late January. I took the time to call her and make my opinion known, since I can't see how traditional deer calibers in a rifle would be a greater danger than the high-octane hunting pistols that have been used for a decade in Indiana without a problem. We need to get more people, especially the young folks, into the field, not less...and I can think of fewer things that would be more rewarding than going afield with a lever-action deer rifle that had been in my family for years.
Thanks for listening...