I have to agree with lineofsight on the "why not get closer" idea. The late Jack O'Connor took pretty much every species of Noth American big game, with a Winchester Model 70 Featherweight, in .270 Winchester, and pretty much every bighorn sheep he ever shot was within 200 yards. Everyone seems to be getting caugh up in the "bigger, faster, farther" rage. We'd all be better off, to pick the rifle and caliber combination that we can shoot, like to shoot, and
shoot well. That means shooting something you're not tensed-up with, waiting to go off every shot, and becoming better
hunters, IE better stalkers. Mr. Chopperdoctor Sr. hunts exclusively with a Browning BBR in .338 Win Mag. I've shot it a few times, and he can have it! I own a .270., a .308, a 30-06, and even a .300 Weatherby, and unless I'm in Griz country, I'll reach for the .270 every time. I don't have a problem using it on Elk or Moose, with the right bullet, at the right range. Don't get me wrong, I've spent pleny-o-afternoons, hunkered down on a small hill top, splattin' gophers with my .308 target rifle, and a 125 grain pointed soft point out of my 30-06, is magic on coyotes. Hell, even the Weatherby is easier shooting than that G@&damn .338, and I can print 3/4" groups with the right factory ammo with it, but that .270 just feels like it belongs in my arms. It's always a surprise when the sear breaks, and for me it's like plinking with a .22. Making the shot is a very small part of the whole experience, as far as I'm concerned. It takes a lot more to learn to think like the animal you're after, than it does to sit and blaze away at it from so far away, it doesn't even know you're there. It definitely shows a lot more respect for the animal, and is a much truer test of your mettle.
Whoops! Sorry for the sermon.
