BLR 308 Win, 165g Fusion, bull and cow moose

FoymountFarm

Regular
GunNutz
Rating - 100%
250   0   0
Location
Rockland, ON
Returned Thursday from our annual moose hunt. We travelled 3000 km return, spent about 33 hours in the truck in total. The hunt was successful, in fact, the actual "hunting" lasted less than an hour.

Monday morning my hunting partner and I went up the lake about 25 minutes in the dark and reached our spots on the river just at legal light. He dropped me off at my spot and then putt-putt backtracked 3/4 km down river to his. By the time he was getting out of the boat the bull and cow were down.

After he had dropped me off I tossed my life jacket on the beach, laid my pack by a tree, uncased and loaded my rifle, slung it over my shoulder and went to the shore to look west, upriver. As I then looked north where I expected the moose to be, the bull was following the cow out of the tree line. They must have heard me (the wind was in my favour and moose can't see well) because they were looking hard my way. I made a soft cow call which seemed to calm them both. After a five minute standoff, nerve wracking for me as they were in cover, she led him out of the brush and into the open.

I figured that he would hang around if I dropped her first so when she offered me a perfect broadside at 187 yards I took it. She humped up so I knew she was hit hard, but she turned 90 degrees and started walking away from me towards the trees. When she offered another broadside a second shot anchored her down.

He, meanwhile, stood and watched her. He started to move away from me to the tree line but turned and offered a broadside at 232 yards. One shot, he wobbled, turned 90 degrees to the trees, teeter-tottered and dropped.

Our crew's "hunt" was done. A few hours later we had both animals back at camp. As luck would have it, there was a rented excavator there for some bush road work and it made much easier work of getting the moose from the boat than it was getting them in.

I used a stainless Browning BLR Lightweight PG in 308 Winchester. Cartridges were 165g Federal Fusion. The shots on the cow were through and through, the shot on the bull passed through the ribs on the far side but did not exit the hide (not recovered though, maybe in a zillion pieces). The Fusions did their job very well on the lungs but I'm not certain they would hold together if they hit bone bigger than ribs. I was intending to use the Federal Vital Shok 180g Nosler Partition and my second choice was the 180g Federal Fusion. However, after many range trips and performance/accuracy testing, neither 180g bullet performed as well as the 165g Fusions. I had also tested the 165g Federal Vital Shok Trophy Bonded tip and the 168g Winchester Ballistic Silvertip but nothing had the consistent accuracy of the Fusion 165's in my BLR.

Here's a few pictures of the adventure:

1.jpg2.jpg3.jpg4.jpgIMG_0583.jpg
 

Attachments

  • 1.jpg
    1.jpg
    75.4 KB · Views: 553
  • 2.jpg
    2.jpg
    70.9 KB · Views: 552
  • 3.jpg
    3.jpg
    77.2 KB · Views: 551
  • 4.jpg
    4.jpg
    96.7 KB · Views: 550
  • IMG_0583.jpg
    IMG_0583.jpg
    34.7 KB · Views: 551
neat, good stuff on a quick hunt.

I guess it goes to show, its not so much about MOA or Sub MOA accuracy which is important for Hunting, I would take a 2 moa strout projectile for big game like the Moose over a whitetail projectile Personally , any day of the week.

Success is success however, maybe something to look at on future trips!!

BTW- hows the Mini digger on hand for the carry out!
 
Nice Moose. Ontario is one big province 3000kms is a lot of driving.


I was super impressed with Fusion 180gr out of 300 wsm Browning Bar last year. 2 shot fired 1 Moose and 1 Elk. Moose was through lungs @100 yards and bang flop. Elk was 75 yards frontal he ran straight towards me at 10 yards I was ready to shoot again but he died 2 seconds later right in front of me.

I handloaded for that 300wsm to save money but for that kind of bullet performance in fairly reasonable price point think I will continue using the factory Fusions.
 
BTW- hows the Mini digger on hand for the carry out!

"As luck would have it, there was a rented excavator there for some bush road work and it made much easier work of getting the moose from the boat than it was getting them in."

Very nice, he looks to have a big body compared to a smaller rack.

Indeed. We figured 3-4 years old. His teeth weren't worn. He did have a left knee that had been badly hurt at one time but healed.

Nice Moose. Ontario is one big province 3000kms is a lot of driving.

Thanks. Almost from one end to the other, east-west and back.
 
Anyone know why cow harvest is allowed there? Locally are they trying to reduce the population? Understand Ontario is big and like BC populations are different all over.

No umchorn to this comment just curious, there are a ton of moose here for instance but no cow harvest allowed (ten point or greater on one antler, or tri-palm only).
 
The crew is 7 but 2 who planned to come had to cancel a month before so 5 guys in 2 vehicles with one trailer.

A side note, over the trip my 2016 F150 FX4 with the 5.0 litre used 11.2 litres per 100 km. Pretty good.

Sounds like a great trip, sometimes the drive up north is half the fun. The drive home how ever always seems twice as long.

Anyone know why cow harvest is allowed there? Locally are they trying to reduce the population? Understand Ontario is big and like BC populations are different all over.


No umchorn to this comment just curious, there are a ton of moose here for instance but no cow harvest allowed (ten point or greater on one antler, or tri-palm only).

Not just cow harvest but calf harvest as well!? If we are really having a big decrease in population why not just sell bull tags?
 
Sounds like a great trip, sometimes the drive up north is half the fun. The drive home how ever always seems twice as long.



Not just cow harvest but calf harvest as well!? If we are really having a big decrease in population why not just sell bull tags?

Calf makes sense, doesn't do much harm to a population, but moose cow harvest somewhere not like Newfoundland I don't understand.
 
My opinion will not be popular here....

The Ontario rules are ridiculously complicated........

Step one- issue bull tags appropriately.....
Step two- issue antierless tags as appropriate (knowing some antierless may be calves)
Step three- do away with the group bias BS and let a guy that wants to do solo do so.....
 
NL used to have three types of tags. Either ### or calf, Bull Only or calf and Cow Only or Calf. I think they made away with the Cow Only tag, in my area they did. I had Cow Only tag three times. Dunnu the logic...

Moose are plentyful but I have seen decreased number over the years. There has been a push the last few years to reduce numbers around highways and even in National parks.
 
In some WMU there are more cow tags than bulls. Cant figure the logic if you are trying to maintain or increase the population, but we often see more cows than bulls. Everyone gets a calf tag.

I would be all for a 3 yr moratorium on cow hunting.
 
Back
Top Bottom