Correct, however I have a quick and sincere question for you.
How do you determine if the animal is going to stand still, or take a step during that longer-than-one-second flight across 1100 yd?
I have talked to a few LR hunters, and without exception every one of them has had this happen to them; the game moved and the shot ended up a miss or worse.
Have you ever had this happen to you?
Ted
It happens to archery hunters a lot, too. And yet that is considered by many to be the fairest way to hunt.I'd say its up to the individual to decide which chances to take.
1100yds, or 11 yards, how do you know whether the animal will move and how far and how fast?
Arrogant? Not at all....The one thing that is a constant in anything you do, is that the more you practice and challenge yourself, the better you get.....Although I'm not going to be surprised if some don't get that.....
Out of curiousity, you find that statement arrogant, how many centerfire rounds do you fire in a month? Rimfire? And is it always exactly the same scenario? A guy could shoot a million rounds a month, but if all he's doing is punching holes in the 100 yard board from sandbags, he's not going to learn as much as if he challenged himself each time he was out.
It happens to archery hunters a lot, too.........
Clearly you shouldn't be shooting at animals past 150 yards if you think 25 yards means nothing at that range!
At 1100 yards the bullet POI is about 12-20" higher than at 1125. So if he adjusted his scope for 1125 and the bull was 1100, then the bullet would impact in the spine/hump area instead of the lungs.
Which apparently it did, according to the shooter.
I've heard many old time moose hunters talk about "dropping moose in their tracks" by shooting them in the hump area. Just like what happened to that moose.
The shooter indicates there was no wind and looking at the river it doesn't look as if there is any wind disturbing the water.
So, from reading the shooters comments, looking at a ballistic table, looking at the undisturbed water on the river and watching the reaction of the moose, I'd say:
He hit the moose higher than he hoped for, but still in line with the moose vitals.
The moose was dropped by a similar shot many moose hunters use t closer range, but we don't complain about that.
That was no lucky shot.
The one thing I think is missing from this type of hunting is the thrill of being up close and personal with the animal.
I like to get as close as possible, not so much for the kill but just to see how close one can get.
am surprised by the bullet drop of 12-20" between 1100 yards and 1125 yards. I have a 7mm Rem which will do that or close to it. Anyway it just makes it worse in my opinion. That leaves a margin of 8" of maybe and a prayer. OK for targets.
The guy can shoot, that is not the issue that makes it unethical.
The fact the animal has time to move from when the shot is touched off till the time the bullet gets there is! Even if the animal looks relaxed it could decide to move and if wounded the chance of finding it again could be pretty slim and result in a cruel death, hence the shot should not have been taken, my opinion fwiw
Using this concept, could we also say that virtually all bow hunting past about 20 yards is unethical?![]()
A bow at 65 yards hits in less time than that bullet took to get there,:



























