Not all leps are shot out of stands- many are tracked and stalked. Sometimes they end up with the rush in the grass that you cannot see.
Everyone thinks that they can shoot an animal betwen the eyes at a dead run with their favorite rifle (or shotgun - which again is frowned upon in many areas) .
In that area of the world you have to remeber that you may have been stalking and looking for 8 hours, you are tired, the sun is killing you, the gras sis up to your armpits, you wonder what is crwling around down there -- any black Mambas??, you are getting dehydrated, the bugs are crawling up your skin, the needle like thorns have stuck through your boots and are firmly imbedded in your legs and arms, you are getting dopey and losing the edge that you had many days ago, you are angry that your rifle and / or ammo is lost and you wonder in the back of your mind if the rifle you borrowed will work or if you will work it the wrong way as its not what you are used to -- then it all happens in 2 seconds
Whether you get mauled, killed, gored, trampled, bit by a snake and die, or look back as an non-event depends on skill, reaction, training, equipment, innate abilities and the grace of your god. I fdind more often then not it is inate abilities mixed with experience of any kind with your rifle and shooting.
The lep video is simply an example. The net is full of other examples (smooth and not so smooth hunts) with many different animals. If that was a 2000 lb cape buffalo coming at you through the grass, you would not be calling it a kitty (a lep is no where near a kitty - they are a chain saw running at full speed) and your "girlish" scream will likely be your last.
YYYY - ya i happen to agree that not everyone should hunt- but they do. I also see how many think they are prepared because of their "training" but they have no idea on how to train or prepare for the different field of operations. I have seen individuals appear wanting to set up their super dooper mag with 25x scope and think they will just set up on high ground and pick the eye out of --- whatever animal --- at 500 yds cause that is what they are trained to do. They are very chagrined to learn it likely wont happen that way. fast, instictive shooting is the norm.
The original thread was about stopping power -- velocity vs. mass. It went to marksmanship pretty quickly. Again - if you dont hit anything it does no good. So I assume that you do hit where you hope to.
Mass vs. velocity for stopping power is still the question. For deer sized animals I take high velocity rapid expandig bullets. Anything larger I opt for slower speeds and larger then caliber bullets. If you hunt North America any 30-06 or similar with quality bullets is plenty.
as an aside -- all the cats I have ever seen killed are eaten by the locals. NOTHING goes to waste. The cats all kill livestock, people and game animals. As for leps - they reproduce like any barn cats. Boomer is absolutely right where many cats are taken in the last few months or year of their lives and they are getting foolish when it comes to finding food. They cant compete with the younger cats- they are beat up and teeth are broken. You take it out of the chain and there are many more to take its place.
The funny thing is that in many parts of the world they view our shooting of coyotes and wolfs as a horrible thing. How many here refuse to shoot a coyote or wolf? I am sure there are some here on line - but no one that I know.
The video is not meant to be some argument in favor of this or that - only an illustration of the activity that can occur.
rant now over