It has to be edge-on and thrown in the air.
Byron Ferguson does it with asprin tablets thrown into the air... and he does it with a longbow.
It has to be edge-on and thrown in the air.
Full fudd experience would be with a .308, .270, .303, .30-30 or .30-06 and a gun you hadn't fired in 4 years with old factory ammo. I think you are mixing it and the early 1900's Englishman going for a hunt in the Canadian frontier.
Again, do what you have to to put the animal down cleanly (that's the important part) - the thought of wasting meat because of shot
placement bugs me personally.
All this talk about shot placement. You can place a shot perfectly but without using a good constructed bullet placement means #### all.
why not a 338-06? more powder means more velocity, rite?![]()
Pending proper bullets on the 6.5mm end.
Seems to me the 6.5 Swede made a good reputation for penetration with 160RN bullets on moose. I would think a heavy NP would even be better. I'd live to shoot a moose with a 175gr RN in my 275Rigby for the full route Fudd experience.
To be fair, europeans dont hunt the same way we do. Bullet choice for driven game to a static stands where distances are predetermined are different than still hunting where shooting distance and directions are uncertain.
There's no such thing as a poorly constructed bullet. Only bullets used outside their intended parameters. Know your tools and how to use them.
There's no such thing as a poorly constructed bullet. Only bullets used outside their intended parameters. Know your tools and how to use them.
Byron Ferguson does it with asprin tablets thrown into the air... and he does it with a longbow.
Of course there are poorly constructed bullets.
They are the ones that don’t perform properly inside thier intended parameters. Shoot and hunt enough and you will find them.
I beg to differ. A couple of members here have had bad experiences with the Hornady 9.3mm 285 gr. Spire Point, blowing up on hip and shoulder bones etc, on both moose and deer. Likewise with the Hornady DGX on buffalo... very poor reputation. Are you suggesting that a 285 gr chunk of lead fired at moderate velocity from a medium bore was only intended as a varmint bullet?
Well, perhaps. I've only been at it 30 years on four continents, including just over a year in Africa. Blasting stuff with everything from .22 LR to .416 Rigby, from cast lead to cup & core to mono metal to premium bullets. I guess I definitely need to get out more.
You've been very fortunate to never have had a bullet not perform properly.
It seems that bullet manufacturers ditch the poorly constructed and problematic designs though.
Bingo.
Spining an animal doesn't ensure a quicker or more painless death than a heart / lung shot. All spining does is paralyze it from the point of injury back. Shoulder shots just prevent it from running. Neither mean death as instantaneous as the immobilization. The cause of death is still exsanguination. I've seen plenty of spined animals take longer to die than from a heart shot which instantaneously drops blood pressure and results in unconsciousness in very short order.
It's like, if you had to choose, would you rather be shot through the hips (same as a shoulder shot) or through the spine, or right through the heart? There's a reason the execute people with heart shots, not spine or hip shots.
The advantage of spine and shoulder shots is in anchoring something where you need it anchored, not in a necessarily quicker death.