Actually, the .22 LR has earned that right long before we were born.
Every species of big & small game on earth have been dispatched with
the little .22 under the right conditions. Big bores are a true blast to
use for hunting and plinkin', but knowing your game's anatomy & putting
the "pill" in the zone for a sure finish goes a lot further than a big-ass
bullet in the wrong spot anyday.
If one were never to leave Ontario, a .243 Win. is all that would be needed.![]()
However there is nothing as effective as a "big-ass bullet" in the RIGHT spot!!!
As far as 22LR dispatching EVERYTHING big and small on earth, is more than a bit of a stretch. You might want to confine that to North America, or show me the write ups on elephant, hippo, rhino, Cape buffalo, croc etc being dispatched with even the best shot from a 22 LR.
I had a hunter tell me he took a Moose with a 270 Win from 400+ yards. I'm gonna guess 150gr - but he said he dropped him with one shot that hit. He said it took 3 shot to get on target with help of a spotter. Does this sound possible?
In his book "African Rifles & Cartridges" John Taylor mentioned that "the modern .22 rimfire is really an
astounding little weapon. Given a good scope sight and a steady shot, it's almost unbelievable the
variety of animals you can shoot with it. There was a fella in Tanganyika who habitually used it on
all kinds of buck up to, and including zebra."
He mentions elswhere in the book that he knew a fella that killed 2 elephant by stalking right up close to
them and would shoot the buggers in the left armpit. This pierced the aorta leading from the heart, and
on both occasions, the elephant dropped within 60 paces from the spot they were shot.
Pretty ballzy hunters they had in those days before WW2. The good ones knew the anatomy and
physiology of their game well.
You can bet your ass that the .22lr has nuked the biggest critters around on occasion, but it's not
recommended unless it's a survival situation. Poachers have always been abundant in the game fields
and many rely on the .22 because of it's quiet report and affordability.
Crocs are no worries for the experienced hunter armed with a .22 who times his shot proper.
I myself prefer to use big chunks of lead for both small and large game, but I use reduced velocity
cast bullet loads in all of them. I shoot big game within 100yds. and preferably under 80.
For varmints and pests I'll bomb them out to around 200yds.
But I still carry my old Cooey model 39 the most when loafing about the woods.
Much of Taylor's musings are taken with appropriate doses of salt. An elephant to my thinking would take hours to die with a .22 caliber whole through it's aorta which is the size of a fire hose, and the heart weighs up to 70lbs. That's more than many of the small antelope or an eastern wolf here. There is about 500 litres of blood in an average elephant, that's several oil drums, and if you shot a hole in a drum and kept topping it up to get 500L through the .22 hole, even with pressure inside, you're measuring time til empty in hours. There is no possible way it's dropping in 60 yards. Odds are, it would actually clot and heal. I've seen heavy African game lung shot with a .300 H&H that cut the heart (frontal shot) still a fraction the size of elephant running half an hour after the hit.
He mentions elswhere in the book that he knew a fella that killed 2 elephant by stalking right up close to
them and would shoot the buggers in the left armpit. This pierced the aorta leading from the heart, and
on both occasions, the elephant dropped within 60 paces from the spot they were shot.
Pretty ballzy hunters they had in those days before WW2. The good ones knew the anatomy and
physiology of their game well.