Instead of arguing calibers - I like foot pounds energy...
Foot pounds of energy is an even worse way to compare cartridges.
Instead of arguing calibers - I like foot pounds energy...
last year my hunting partner only brought a .243 and kneck shotted a moose. it dropped immediately.
Where are these armored mooses at anyways? Hope they're not in Québec...
After the moose was down, did you see where your bullets hit? Doesn't sound like you hit the cage.
fish
Actualy three straight through the boiler room and it was in BC but a moose is a moose ours are a bit bigger but they die the same. A .243 for moose/elk or grizzly is just plain dumb. People will tell you about that moose that they killed with a .243 but the don't mention the ones that got away with a dinky little bullet in it guts.
Lots of moose killed with the 243, but really it should be reserved for experienced hunters who are good shots, as the 243 is really marginal for moose.
As others have noted, any rifle can be made into a youth model simply by cutting the stock and reinstalling the butt pad. If you already shoot 30-06, why not just get another one, shorten it to length, and buy some light ammo (or have lighter handloads done up for the kids) and be done with it. Then you'd have ammo interchangeability with your main rifles (major factor for a backup rifle) and your "youth gun" would be chambered in a much more versatile caliber.
My grandfather shot 2 moose each year for over 50 years with a Winchester 94 rifle in 30-30. Only one required a second shot. He shot them in the neck.
One moose got canned as family food and the other was given to the orphanage.
Of course, in the 20's the moose had not yet developed their immunity to 30 cal bullets....
This was in northern BC. Moose there are large. He was usually fairly close and I guess he was a good shot.
I am less fussed about using a 243 than I am about letting an inexperienced shooter take a shot at a moose. If she (or your son) goes in the woods with a rifle, she should have lots of practice from the sitting and standing position. The intial practice could and should be with a 22 rifle of a similar action type.



























