Moose defense thread:Alaska

MD

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A friend who lives in Alaska just posted this on FB




Last night, I had my closest call yet. A young, 600-lb bull moose charged me from 75 yards away while I was fishing alone last night around 11pm. No matter what I did, he wouldn't stop coming. When he was about 10 feet away from me, I put a bullet in his right lung with my 44 mag pistol. He wheeled around and wobbled toward the creek before crossing it and disappearing into the bush and shadows.

The Trooper who showed up after I called it in (it's not hunting season so I had to report it) agreed that because it was dark by then it was too dangerous to look for it. He said I should wait for the Fish and Game Trooper on duty in the morning to call me. So I did. After I finally fell asleep, three hours later, around 6:30am, the F&G Trooper called and left a message that I'd better not be answering because I was out looking for that moose.

So I loaded up my kayak into my truck. I was about half a mile from my house when the truck died, probably permanently based on the mileage and symptoms... Luckily, a guy who just bought a weekend cabin in the same gated community passed me a few seconds later. I loaded my kayak into the back of his truck and he dropped me off at the boat ramp with my rifle.

After I crossed the creek in my kayak, I trudged alone through the tall grass on the island as I looked for the moose. I hoped it wasn't wounded and looking for Round 2. I also hoped that none of the grizzlies which are there right now because of the salmon were chowing down on the moose. As I circled back to where I thought it had gone into the bush, there he was in a small clearing.

I called my new neighbor and he was kind enough to run over to my house and pick up my two chainsaws. His son was with him and had the foresight to suggest also taking my big plastic snow sled. We ended up tying the kayak and snow sled together and skidded them back and forth across the creek to shuttle the dad and I across one at a time. Because I still hadn't gutted the moose and it had been there overnight, and the flies had already done a number on it, the meat wasn't safe for human consumption. The Trooper also told me that I couldn't use the meat to feed my dog. (That rule is to keep people from hunting illegally and claiming it was a self defense kill. I was still sad about it nonetheless.)

So, since the meat would be taken to the dump, I made quick work of it and with my chainsaw cut the guy into half a dozen pieces after I gutted it. We dropped the sections of moose into the snow sled and across the creek. On the second to last load, the sled filled with water and the head dumped into the creek. Luckily, I was able to retrieve it. Since the head was in such great condition, the Trooper said they'd use it as an educational exhibit to demonstrate what isn't a legal bull moose because of antler tines. So at least it wasn't a total waste of the animal.

I'll be keeping the empty brass shell of the 44 magnum cartridge that saved my life.
 
How did he get a bullet in the "right lung" of a charging moose at 10 feet???

Very odd for a young bull to charge... more likely looking for company... it's just is not in their jeuvenile nature, but stranger things have happened with wild animals.
 
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Know of a couple who was moose hunting several years ago. He and his wife had a trailer set up as a base camp. One evening he left trailer to head out hunting and unknown to him there was a bull just outside the trailer.

Moose charged at him, he managed to get a shot off but nowhere near the moose. Moose antlers punctured one of his lungs and knocked the guy unconscious.

After unexpectedly hearing gunshot wife goes outside to find the state husband was in. They air lifted him out and he survived. Moose was long gone.

Crazy stuff. Sometimes they are very aggressive.
 
How did he get a bullet in the "right lung" of a charging moose at 10 feet???

Very odd for a young bull to charge... more likely looking for company... it's just is not in their jeuvenile nature, but stranger things have happened with wild animals.

The OP said it happened around 11pm so that would make it 20 minutes after sunset if he was in the Anchorage area. Hard to say what the moose thought he looked like in the evening low light. A lot of fishermen there pack a large gun in a chest rig for protection and I'll bet he was glad he had it that evening.
 
The OP said it happened around 11pm so that would make it 20 minutes after sunset if he was in the Anchorage area. Hard to say what the moose thought he looked like in the evening low light. A lot of fishermen there pack a large gun in a chest rig for protection and I'll bet he was glad he had it that evening.

Not questioning carrying the handgun, but at ten feet with a bull "facing you," how do you shoot it in the "right lung?" If you shoot it in the "right lung" it is no longer charging you. Forty years of calling moose while bowhunting, I have been charged several times, while it does get the heart pumping, I have never felt that my life was in danger... but then again, everyone has to decide for themselves when they feel in mortal danger.
 
....but at ten feet with a bull "facing you," how do you shoot it in the "right lung?" If you shoot it in the "right lung" it is no longer charging you.

If the moose is facing you, and you shoot it in the chest, just inside the point of the shoulder, the bullet is going to penetrate a lung. If the moose was broadside, it would most likely have penetrated both lungs. Not sure why this is so hard for you to figure out.
 
If the moose is facing you, and you shoot it in the chest, just inside the point of the shoulder, the bullet is going to penetrate a lung. If the moose was broadside, it would most likely have penetrated both lungs. Not sure why this is so hard for you to figure out.

Because he said that he shot it in the "right lung," if he had shot it in the chest "face-on" he would not know that it penetrated the right lung... and he would likely have said that he had shot it in the "chest." The phrasing makes it appear that it was shot "in the side."
 
Because he said that he shot it in the "right lung," if he had shot it in the chest "face-on" he would not know that it penetrated the right lung... and he would likely have said that he had shot it in the "chest." The phrasing makes it appear that it was shot "in the side."
Your challenging the OP's story like a cop in the interrogation room. He said he shot it at close range as it was charging towards him. I would presume that he discovered later when he was gutting it exactly where the bullet entered and what damage was done.

The last deer I shot entered from the front quarter and only one lung was hit. I found this out while gutting it. Give the OP a little breathing room.
 
Your challenging the OP's story like a cop in the interrogation room. He said he shot it at close range as it was charging towards him. I would presume that he discovered later when he was gutting it exactly where the bullet entered and what damage was done.

The last deer I shot entered from the front quarter and only one lung was hit. I found this out while gutting it. Give the OP a little breathing room.

I'm not challenging anything... weird things happen... but it was strange phrasing for the professed circumstances.
 
Makes me think of the express sights and QD rings on one of my rifles.

Not that there would have necessarily been time but I guess they have their uses.
 
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