A .22 in the right place will kill one. Use what you want but there are better guns.
X 2
We can all find stories of Moose killed with light calibers.....but how many shots did it take and how many wounded and got away.
I love the 257 for deer size game but give me a 30 cal. for Moose.
I want to feel secure about dropping him quick with one shot.
JMHO
then there deff are better choices!Why do we keep falling for this......every now and again someone comes along and posts something about using small guns/calibers on large and/or dangerous game, and as usual, we fall for it and get a long thread going about using expensive bullets, and oh yea, "doesn't matter what you use, just hit em in the right place" blah blah. I'm here to tell you that most of the time people, myself included, don't always hit them in the right spot, and even bullets costing $5 each aren't going to change anything.
You owe it to the game you hunt, to use enough gun to effect a clean kill, that means a bullet long enough, and heavy enough, with enough frontal area to penetrate an animal completely while doing as much damage to internals as possible. It also means not taking low average long shots at game, leave that for the target range. Know your gun, know your game, err on the side of using the heaviest, widest, bullet you can, and stop these threads about using the smallest gun you can find!!
a big cal still does not make up for a bad shot i love the 264 win mag for moose it hits were you point it and sure does a lot of damage when it gets there .i have een guys shooting 300 wetherbys and thy could not hit a moose at 100 yards thy were flinching so bad you are far better of with a smaller cal that yoy can shot then a big one that gets the best of you it is hard to hit a big animal like a moose with your eyes closed well flinching my 2 cents DUTCH
Why do we keep falling for this......every now and again someone comes along and posts something about using small guns/calibers on large and/or dangerous game, and as usual, we fall for it and get a long thread going about using expensive bullets, and oh yea, "doesn't matter what you use, just hit em in the right place" blah blah. I'm here to tell you that most of the time people, myself included, don't always hit them in the right spot, and even bullets costing $5 each aren't going to change anything.
You owe it to the game you hunt, to use enough gun to effect a clean kill, that means a bullet long enough, and heavy enough, with enough frontal area to penetrate an animal completely while doing as much damage to internals as possible. It also means not taking low average long shots at game, leave that for the target range. Know your gun, know your game, err on the side of using the heaviest, widest, bullet you can, and stop these threads about using the smallest gun you can find!!
There is some truth to what you say, but generally guys that flinch don't shoot much & it makes no diff what caliber gun their shooting!
Just last week I saw a guy flinch when the safety was left on his crossbow![]()




























