for .30-06 id stick with a 100 yard max and a 180gr bullet
did you recover the bullet?
Sorry for the poor picture quality.
Fish
There is a spot on game that the Germans call Hole Schutze or something like that. The placement is below the spine, but above the lung. The proximity of the shot to the spine will often make the animal drop. It may then quite quickly recover. Also shots to the neck can have the same effect.
No doubt you do.....but apparently you haven't met Murphy yet. I hope you don't but I wouldn't be so arrogant as to say you won't. I've seen it happen to many a very good hunter.
More than likely with the moose that got up and walked away, it was poor bullet placement more than bullet performance.....even any old cup and core bullet is enough to kill a moose if hit in the lungs.
You read these stories on the internet a lot....I shot a "whatever" and it just walked away....blah, blah blah, the bullet I used was crap and I will never use that product again....when the real story should be I made a lousy shot and I really need to practice a lot more before I go hunting again!!!
I guess everyone's standard of marksmanship is something they personally decide on.
Dropping like a ton of bricks is more often than not a sign of a poor hit with large critters like moose and elk. It means a hit near the spine or brain but unless permanent damage is inflicted to either, the results are temporary as you saw. Sometimes even with what appears to be great shot placement, crap happens. I'd write it off to bad luck rather than a bad bullet.
OP you did a couple of things wrong, first you should have reloaded and watched to see if the moose regained it's feet and then thumped it again, cardinal rule IMHO. Mono metal bullets not necessarily best choice in an '06, I prefer Partitions in sub 3000 fps cartridges as they cover all bases at all ranges. Never trust an animal that drops instantly on the shot, many people have been killed walking up to these same "dead" animals unprepared, even lowly deer have been known to kill people when shot "instantly dead" like this, not to mention buffalo, lion or elephant.
Were you well practiced for a 300 mtr shot? Knowing your rifle and load is far more important than whether it's a 165 or 180 gn bullet, especially in an '06.
As sheep said, if you hunt long enough you will eventually lose an animal it's just reality and the law of averages, sh!t happens. I personally don't subscibe to the "one shot should be all that's required" creedo, Africa taught me to swallow my "pride of marksmanship" and keep shooting till it's down, after all, if you can only hit it once, how much "pride of marksmanship" is there, really?



























