I have a Question?

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Does any ammunition manufacturer produce the old CB Cap or BB Cap Low Power .22 Ammunition any more? If not what is being used as a replacement for squirrels in the more populated areas these days? The pellet rifle has been my choice for a replacement but they are really tough to load under a scope and this Old Timer has trouble holding the small pellets for loading.
I appreciate your help with this!
 
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I’ve got a bunch of the older BB caps, the ones in a tin container that are basically a 22 round lead projectile on top of a 22 case that’s about 1/4” tall.

I also have a bunch of older CB caps, also in tins.
 
Rpg

Is it possible that some of the above mentioned ammunition is for sale? I could use some if so.
The resident squirrels are harvesting my pecans long before the leaves start falling from the trees, it seems I may have to camp under the trees and wait them out. Nothing against squirrels except their steeling pecans and gnawing my ground neutral power line into the house in two. Still, I will give them their due because they do work for their living.
 
Try Ammo seek. CCI CB shorts are available. I have shot a bunch of them in a Winchester 62A chambered for .22 Short only over the years. Velocity is about what it says on the box, 710 fps. Pretty quiet out of a rifle. Good for Rabbits or Squirrels in residential neighborhoods :D
 
CCI has made something called a CB Long since the late 1970’s. They use a 29 grain .22 Short bullet in a .22 Long Case. Only has a few granules of powder. Rifle velocity is a little over 700 fps. They are harder to find in stores than the CCI CB Short version. You may have to mail order them.
Advantages over the shorter case version are that they feed perfectly thru box magazines, and will not leave a residue ring 2/3 of the way inside the chamber like short-cased ones will after extensive shooting.
They will kill squirrels and rabbits with perfect head shots, or forward rib cage shots. Be considerate of the animal. Chose your shots carefully; keep them under 20 yards. Not as much margin for error as regular .22 LR ammo.
I have fired approximately 20,000+ of them in my lifetime; sometimes hunting squirrels, rabbits, and snakes. Killed thousands of pest birds ( starlings, sparrows, crows, etc. ) with both the short and long versions. Much prefer the Long. Probably another 8 to 10 thousand ( mostly birds ) with various full-powered Long Rifle ammo.
Needless to say the CCI .22 CB Long is one of my favorite and most useful rimfire cartridges.
I like the .22 Magnum a whole lot too, in a rifle.
 
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CCI has made something called a CB Long since the late 1970’s. They use a 29 grain .22 Short bullet in a .22 Long Case. Only has a few granules of powder. Rifle velocity is a little over 700 fps. They are harder to find in stores than the CCI CB Short version. You may have to mail order them.
Advantages over the shorter case version are that they feed perfectly thru box magazines, and will not leave a residue ring 2/3 of the way inside the chamber like short-cased ones will after extensive shooting.
They will kill squirrels and rabbits with perfect head shots, or forward rib cage shots. Be considerate of the animal. Chose your shots carefully; keep them under 20 yards. Not as much margin for error as regular .22 LR ammo.
I have fired approximately 20,000+ of them in my lifetime; sometimes hunting squirrels, rabbits, and snakes. Killed thousands of pest birds ( starlings, sparrows, crows, etc. ) with both the short and long versions. Much prefer the Long. Probably another 8 to 10 thousand ( mostly birds ) with various full-powered Long Rifle ammo.
Needless to say the CCI .22 CB Long is one of my favorite and most useful rimfire cartridges.
I like the .22 Magnum a whole lot too, in a rifle.
 
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Another one that works well in populated areas is the Aquila Super Colibri. It uses a 20 gr. bullet at a listed 590 fps. I used a pellet rifle on squirrels when I lived in town in Laramie. It was OK but I switched over to the Aquila in a regular .22 LR rifle. It was quieter than the pellet rifle and much more effective. They’re usually not hard to find. I like them better than the CB loads.
 
Does any ammunition manufacturer produce the old CB Cap or BB Cap Low Power .22 Ammunition any more? If not what is being used as a replacement for squirrels in the more populated areas these days? The pellet rifle has been my choice for a replacement but they are really tough to load under a scope and this Old Timer has trouble holding the small pellets for loading.
I appreciate your help with this!
What damages are the squirrels doing to warrant killing them?
 
CCI made a load that is sorta confusing ... on the box cover it is printed
CCI - with " CB " - over " 22 Short " ... below this is " sub-sonic" and below that "Low Noise". Spec's call for 29 gr. bullet (solid point) @ 710 fps .
"Our 22 CB loads keep down volumn and velocity yet knock out targets and pest at close range . "

So this must be CCI's 22 CB load ... I've used them in the past , still have a few but have no idea of availability today ...
Good luck in your search !
Gary
 
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What damages are the squirrels doing to warrant killing them?

Squirrels like us better than we like them. They want to live with us. If you live in a rural area you WILL have squirrels living in your house. They are very clever and persistent. Nothing like sitting in your favorite chair and watching TV and have a squirrel run across your feet and disappear down the floor vent for heating and cooling. You get to sweep up their droppings and mop up their chosen spots to urinate. Trap them and kill them or live with them.
 
Squirrels like us better than we like them. They want to live with us. If you live in a rural area you WILL have squirrels living in your house. They are very clever and persistent. Nothing like sitting in your favorite chair and watching TV and have a squirrel run across your feet and disappear down the floor vent for heating and cooling. You get to sweep up their droppings and mop up their chosen spots to urinate. Trap them and kill them or live with them.
Almost every place I have lived, I had squirrels as residents in my backyard trees. I never had any problem with them getting inside my house or attic. That is probably because there are no openings in my house to allow their access. I enjoy having them as guests in my yard and seeing them frolic. I even feed them cobbed corn and peanuts in the shell just to keep them around. The only damage they have ever done to me is plant acorns in my wife's outdoor potted plants. And my cats love to watch them play from their perches in my sun porch. They would gladly eat them if they could get out. When I was a kid I hunted squirrels in the woods with a .22, but I can't say I enjoyed it much, and felt that the small amount of meat I got that way was not worth the effort. I have no quarrel with squirrel hunters who eat their prey, I just choose to not be one of them.
 
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