Survival Beginning during
World War II, aircrew survival rifles in .22 Hornet were developed and issued by the
U.S. military. They were a
bolt-action rifle with collapsible
stock (
M4 Survival Rifle), a break-open rifle/
shotgun over-under (
M6 Aircrew Survival Weapon), and a
takedown bolt-action rifle (
AR-5/MA-1). Military survival issue .22 Hornet ammunition was loaded with
soft-point expanding jacketed bullets, not complying with the
Hague Convention. The United States was the only exception to a complete prohibition of the use of expanding bullets in war, due to its ambiguous policy. However, the cartridge boxes were labeled "Under no circumstances is the ammunition to be used for offensive or defensive measures against enemy personnel. This ammunition is provided for use with your emergency survival rifle for the killing of game for food under emergency survival conditions only." File:22-Hornet-Disclosure.jpg|Disclosure File:22-Hornet-Box.jpg|.22 Hornet Box
Competition The .22 Hornet is a popular cartridge for the Field/Hunter's pistol category in IHMSA and NRA
metallic silhouette shooting.
Hunting Survivalist
Mel Tappan on the .22 Hornet: "It is accurate, has virtually no recoil and a light report.... [I]ts performance limits its use to small game and pests within . It is by no means a reliable deer cartridge, even with handloads." Sam Fadala of
GUNS magazine calls it "perfect for mid-range varmints of all stripes," everything from small game, mountain birds (e.g., blue grouse), turkey, javelina, peccaries, coyote, and Australian wild pigs and goats. The Hornet is considered an optimal cartridge for
turkey hunting, though it is not as powerful as modern .22 centerfires. At mid-century, southern sportsman Henry Edwards Davis pronounced the
Winchester Model 70 chambered for the Hornet "the best commercial rifle for wild turkeys the world has ever seen". In 2011, Lane Kinney was awarded the "Top Turkey in the World" award by
Safari Club International for a record-setting Osceola turkey taken with a
T/C Contender pistol in .22 Hornet. The Hornet's virtual absence of
recoil has made it even quite popular among deer hunters in some areas, although it is generally regarded as very underpowered for deer unless bullet placement is absolutely precise. American hunter
Jack O'Connor decried this practice in the 1950s, stating the Hornet could "under no circumstances" be considered a deer cartridge. Some jurisdictions such as the
Netherlands, the UK ==Firearms==