So you are guessing?
Why would you need first hand experience? This is cgn, grab your axis and reloading manual and get out there and give some advice!
A coworker has been telling me that the 270 Win is marginal for bull elk. I have never hunted elk with a 270, so have no first hand experience. What says CGN?
This book takes you back to a time and place before all of the short fat, long thin, new and improved, magnums, and all of the computer drawings for deer/elk tags arrived. The historic technical information that you will get from his book is invaluable, and it is loaded info of some of his actual hunts both in the U.S. and abroad
Hahaha, yes! Suther where are ya??
Why do we need first hand experience? If reading a book helps, then reading the internet also helps.
I cannot understand some people (with a lot first hand experience) despise the knowledge from the internet. Trust me, I get more from the internet than from the real hunting experiences (of mine and others)
Exactly!
Randy Newberg has killed lots of Elk with a 7mm08...
Nah that was the biggest grizzly bear! Lol
Hahaha, yes! Suther where are ya??
A coworker has been telling me that the 270 Win is marginal for bull elk. I have never hunted elk with a 270, so have no first hand experience. What says CGN?
A .270 may be fine for moose but everyone knows they die a lot easier than elk - moose just lay down in the bush if you put a shot through the boiler room. Western elk live in the mountains and will just run downhill because it requires less effort and they can run for miles unless you shoot directly into the crease behind their front leg. If you are hunting out east you need to be a lot more careful with caliber selection because coastal elk (like the ones in Labrador) have a much tougher hide and thicker hair because of the harsher environment near the ocean and the exposure to salt and coy wolf hybrids. The problem with a .270 is that it is a small bullet moving at high speed - if you use anything other than a Nosler Partition you are going to have bullets blow up on the hair and hide. What you want is a large bullet with a flat meplat going around 2500 fps - this will give you a lot of frontal area to impart shock while staying supersonic out past the 300 yds. Also make sure you use jacketed bullets - copper jackets and solids were developed for hunting. Cast lead bullets were designed for target shooting only and can never be ethically used on an animal as they are too soft to penetrate properly and will pencil a small hole through without expending all their energy. What you need is a bullet that will penetrate the hide and then blow up in the body cavity expending all it's energy on target.
The point here is that if you have never read a book, or gained any experience in the field, or spent time with some old timers at your gun club or in a hunt camp, if you have never gained experience or learned from the stories of success and failure of your predecessors -- you may not know that all of the above is complete horse####. Experience is the knife that carves bull#### away from reality
A coworker has been telling me that the 270 Win is marginal for bull elk. I have never hunted elk with a 270, so have no first hand experience. What says CGN?
One of probably 30 calibers capable. What exactly is the purpose here? Get people arguing? Drive your post count?
Some just do that with "welcome to the forums"
Marginal for the right side. OK for the left side.
Suther I understand you are just playing the victim, but no one is mocking you for being poor or inexperienced. We are ribbing you for presenting secondhand knowledge as first hand and giving advice on things you have never experienced . Some unsolicited advice from me is not to take this attitude of “reading others experience “ = experience worthy of sharing into your career in consulting...
Suther I understand you are just playing the victim, but no one is mocking you for being poor or inexperienced. We are ribbing you for presenting secondhand knowledge as first hand and giving advice on things you have never experienced . Some unsolicited advice from me is not to take this attitude of “reading others experience “ = experience worthy of sharing into your career in consulting...