I am considering the purchase of a gun for home defense and overlanding defense especially now that we are bringing my GF sons with us occasionally. I have only fired a handgun once about 30 years ago and obviously have never owned a gun of any type. I am looking for opinions on what would be a good multiuse weapon for the home/outdoors. I am in CA so not worried about grizzlies but more about other critters, 2 and 4-legged. I am not interested in purchasing multiple weapons at this time. I have been told a shorter barreled shotgun with alternating shells/slugs, .44 mag pistol, rifle, and I'm still not sure what to do. Obviously, safety is first and foremost and the vast majority of my friends have numerous guns and are happy to take me out, educate and show me use and care. I'd like to see what my fellow OB friends would recommend.
**please no ‘you live in Commiefornia, vote Republican, etc, etc’. ***
In your situation: Have only fired a pistol once, very little training, ect I suggest a pump action shotgun. They are simple to maintain, no expertise required (just point and shoot). Make sure it fits you so that you can quickly pick it up, shoulder it, and aquire a target, and fire in one smooth motion.
Secondly and most importantly take the CHL corse, even if you don’t plan on carrying a handgun or concealed carry. The class will give you the basics for home defense as well as self defense. A fire arm is the last resort to any threat two legged or otherwise, especially out side of your home. Know the laws before you pull your firearm out.
Lastly, practice, practice, practice. What ever fire arm you end up getting take it out to the gun range and practice as often as possible with ammunition close in specs to what you plan on using for home defense. In my case, I have several options of fire arms in various calibers. For my .45 ACP I practice with 130 grain lead wad cutters loaded to the maximum recommended powder weight. My .45 ACP defense round is Hornandy Critical Defense 130 grain +P. The Critical Defense round is about 200 fps slower than my training round which means that it has slightly less recoil than what I’m used to for training making me quicker on target reacquisition.
For your shot gun, when training; practice with the exact ammunition you would be using in the case of self defense. If you’re like me and mix shots in your shotgun, practice with the same loads in the same order, as different shot types have different patterns and different recoils.