If you don't reload, you can always buy 'Cowboy Action Shooting' type .44 Magnums from Georgia Arms, etc. It'll be milder and less expensive than .44 Magnum hunting loads. Save the brass - you never know when you may start reloading. I counted my .45 Colt empties nine years ago - I had over 2,700! I ordered, sight unseen, a Dillon 550B - and started reloading, never having touched a press or die beforehand. It's a fun adjunct to your shooting hobby. You won't save money, you'll just have more ammo - and what you want, not 'what's available' - to shoot more.
BTW, it'll also chamber and fire the precursor to the .44 S&W Special - the released in 1871 S&W first mass produced metal cartridge centerfire round, the '.44 Russian' - if you can find them. Starline makes the brass. By all means, clean the carbon/lead out as you go from shooting short-cased ammo to longer cased ammo - especially important with .44 Magnums and their high pressures.
Stainz