What happens when the big bull you just called in steps out with 15 minutes of light left on the other side of the lake or swamp? Pass on him becuase thats not hunting?Shooting moose at 400 yards + is for people who are poor hunters but think they can compensate with technology and shooting skills. Wounding rates go way up. The moose deserve better. Learn to hunt.
Shooting moose at 400 yards + is for people who are poor hunters but think they can compensate with technology and shooting skills. Wounding rates go way up. The moose deserve better. Learn to hunt.
I've done most all my meat critters inside 100 yds. Varmints on the other hand are happily bombed out to as far as yer rig can take 'em.Shooting moose at 400 yards + is for people who are poor hunters but think they can compensate with technology and shooting skills. Wounding rates go way up. The moose deserve better. Learn to hunt.
What happens when the big bull you just called in steps out with 15 minutes of light left on the other side of the lake or swamp? Pass on him becuase thats not hunting?
Shooting moose at 400 yards + is for people who are poor hunters but think they can compensate with technology and shooting skills. Wounding rates go way up. The moose deserve better. Learn to hunt.
What happens when the big bull you just called in steps out with 15 minutes of light left on the other side of the lake or swamp? Pass on him becuase thats not hunting?
Yes. Pass. Sadly, for some, anything legal is "hunting". Consider this. How would you propose to even find the spot where that moose was standing, after walking all the way around that lake? After dark? Or track the moose after dark in a swamp? Or do all your shots magically result in a moose dead in its tracks with a strobe light leading you to the glorious set of antlers? A moose is big, but it isn't unusual for shooters who aren't skilled hunters to hit and lose one without the planning and skill required to finish the deal. Shooting across a lake with 15 minutes of light left is likely a bad idea no matter how far the shot is. At dawn, or during the day with a buddy to watch and mark the spot and direct you as you circle the lake, or if you could paddle your canoe directly to the spot it was standing without taking your eyes off of it, would be a different story.
Just because you can see a moose (or any other game animal) does not mean you have a "shot opportunity" - well of course you do, kinda, but responsible, and dare I say ethical hunters, know better than to shoot at anything they see.




























