Alright, here's a little background first:
I'm 29. I got into handgun shooting about 7 years ago when I bought a 14" 30-30 Contender. I loved that gun, but it wasn't big enough. From there it was a 10" 44 mag Contender. Then came the Taurus Ti Tracker in 41mag, 45/70 Contender, 460 S&W, etc. The calibers got bigger, the loads got heavier, and the recoil got more abusive.
I believe at this point the gun that has finally done me in is the 45/70 BFR. I love that gun, but I think that I just went too far. I've only had it for about 4 years and have about 1400 round through it. Some are pretty mild but most are not for the faint of heart. I knew that it was a bad idea to shoot a steady diet of the heavy loads. I just thought that I had a little longer until they finally did me in.
About 3 months ago while out shooting the BFR I fired a shot, and the fingers in my right hand went numb for a few minutes. It was actually after I made a video for a friend who wanted to se me shoot the BFR with full power loads. Here's the clip.
45-70 BFR recoilI figured that this wasn't a good thing, so I packed up for the day. The next trip out while shooting a 4" Ruger Redhawk 45 Colt, the same thing happened, after only a few shots. I took some time off from shooting the handguns until I finished up a Savage Stiker in 338/375 Ruger that I had been working on for 6 months. I took the Striker out two weeks ago and put about 60 rounds through that without a problem. When It came time to shoot the 10mm (Dan Wesson CCBT), I got one magazine through it before my wrist hurt enough for me to call it a day. When I got home my hand saw a little swollen, but not that bad.
The swelling didn't go down after 3 days, so I stopped by the doctor. I was not ready for what he said. I have a number of hairline fractures in my wrist and hand, some recent, some older and healed over. The numbness is from nerve damage. My wrists are in pretty poor condition (some of that is from work) with some compression fractures. His advice, as an avid shooter himself, was to stop shooting the big guns immediately and permenantly.
His advice is to stick with full size steel framed guns like 1911s and heavy revolvers in moderate calibers under 357 Mag. He even said the my recently aquired S&W 610 is pushing it. At this point, I don't know what do to. I love the large calibers. I know that ehy can be down loaded, but you don't have a Corvette to drive 35 mph to the grocery store, and you don't have a 45-70 revolver to shoot 45 Colt cowboy loads out of it.
Have any of you been in this position? What did you do? Did you stop shooting, change calibers, cut back on the shooting, or did you just keep going unchanged? I really don't know what I want to do. With the exception or a 22 pistol and maybe the model 610, none of my handguns really fall into the moderate caliber range.
If you have any advice, comments or suggestions I'd love to hear them.
Andrew