First time hunting moose, got it done early

dand883

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This year was my first time drawing a moose tag here in NB. I've been applying for years but was always putting in for the closer zones, which are also the zones with the most people and fewest tags, so the odds aren't great. The past 2 years i started to apply for another zone further up north that a cousin has a camp in.

After i got drawn we did some scouting, my cousin pointed out a few spots they had shot moose in the past and just driving around and checking things out we found a really good looking spot.
It was an old clearcut that the roads in were all brushed in with alders and a second road that T'd off and ended at a small swamp. as soon as you got past the alders there were moose tracks all up and down the road in all directions, old tracks, new tracks, all over the place. When we walked in the first time we even saw a small bull in the far side of the swamp. Things are looking good!
The last piece of advice my cousin gave me was to leave the camp at legal shooting light to drive out to our stand. In the past they've shot just as many on the drive in and out of the camp as sitting anywhere out in the woods.

Fast forward a few weeks and we pack up and head to the camp, get everything unpacked, go out and set up some ladder stands and blinds and sit back and wait for the season to start.
Opening morning is perfect, 2-3 degrees, frosty/misty and cool so we wake up and make breakfast, which takes a bit longer than expected so we're leaving the camp about 10 minutes later than we had planned, so we're kind of rushing down the camp road to get to our stand. The road goes through a few clearcuts before we get to the main road and as we come out to the second cut in my head i was thinking "we should slow down a bit here just in case there's a moose in the cut" but we're in a bit of a hurry so we don't but as soon as we make the turn into the cut i see two moose standing out in the mist and kind of yell "moose moose moose". we throw on the brakes, i hop out and load my gun, but in the mist and brush i can barely tell where they were.
I had to walk out in to the cut a ways to see around some brush to get a decent look at them, it's a cow and older calf but there's more brush blocking any shot so i creep further into the cut to find a decent sized sapling i can rest on to steady myself.

I finally find the cow in the mist about 100 yards off and touch off a shot, but she doesn't move, so i shoot again, doesn't move. I shoot a third time and she finally stumbles like i hit her and takes a step forward. At this point my gun is empty so i grab another shell, throw it in, find her in the scope and shoot and again, almost no reaction from her. Grab my last 5th shell i had on me and at this point she's quartering away a tad and wham, last shot and it looks like she goes down.

Here in NB when you get drawn you can have a designated "second gun" on your license, so since i am out of ammo my second gun runs over with his rifle and gets set up in case she pops up again, which almost went bad when the calf popped in to view in the same area the cow went down and starts walking for the tree line. In the excitement he was close to taking a shot at the calf thinking it was the cow until we yelled to stop him from shooting.

After watching a bit and not seeing her get back up i stayed to watch while everyone else boogey'd back to the camp to get all of the gear and extra help getting her out, which was when the real work started.

As we were waiting for the boys to come help we saw another 2 moose in the mist further up the clearcut and 20-30 minutes later could also hear a bull thrashing against a tree in the back corner. Later in the day we talked to some guys in the other cut just behind us and they had seem a different 4 moose at the same time as they heard my shots. With that many moose around in the area I may have been a little quick to jump at the first adult moose i saw but i've waited long enough to get drawn that i didn't want to go home empty handed.

As we were gutting/butchering and getting the meat into bags and coolers for the drive home we worked out what happened with my 5 shots. two were in the lungs almost in the same spot and turned both lungs into jelly. One round hit part of the heart a tad lower and one hit a piece of the liver on its way through (i'm guessing the quartering away 5th shot).
The last hit was kind of a mystery, it didn't hit the guts or anything below the diaphragm or any of the back ham meat but somehow took out one of her hip joints. I can only assume it hit a tree tip or something in the clearcut and deflected back to her back end or a weird change of direction off of bone somewhere. I'm guessing this was the third shot were she staggered a bit.

Being my first moose hunt it's amazing she was still standing so long. I had heard that they can soak up bullets but with 4 shots to the heart/lungs/liver and one taking out her back hip. When she didn't react to the first few shots i thought i must have knocked my scope around and be sending rounds off into the dirt somewhere until i saw the stumble.

All in all though it worked out great. Even though my season was over 8 minutes after it started we got lots of meat for the freezer and i still have the rest of the week off to relax and take it all in.
 
Good on you! I had one bull moose that needed more than 2 shots and just like you all were well placed shot but he just didn’t wanna go down! Mine was at 180m ish when I fired the first few shots… then he disappeared in the willow…. Anyway we waited a bit before following him thinking he would be bedded in the bush, but we heard him splashing in a side bay of the lake, ran over there and put 3 more shots into him before he fell down! Sometime it happens!
 
Great story. The two lung shots sound like they did the job - the others weren't necessary but you can't tell until the animal is being cut up. Well done and good shooting. What was your rifle/cartridge/bullet combination?
 
Great story. The two lung shots sound like they did the job - the others weren't necessary but you can't tell until the animal is being cut up. Well done and good shooting. What was your rifle/cartridge/bullet combination?

Curious about this as well. Headed on my first moose hunt next month. Taking a .308 and a 30-06 with 165 gr trophy bonded bear claws and 168 gr ttsx loads for each.
 
congrats on the first moose.
The first cow moose I shot was with a 174gr nosler partition in a 7mm rem mag
Shot was perfect broadside out in the open of grassy area a big slow moving creek/beaver pond moved through. About 150 yards and I hit her right in the heart/lung money spot.
Could not have been a better shot alignment and at the hit there was a smack of the bullet and I saw her quiver a little and then put her head back down to chew more grass. I was sure .... 100% sure of my shot but there she stood. So I loaded another round and aimed for the high shoulder spine shot. At the shot she instantly crumpled down and forward in a big splash into the water and disappeared. Lots more to the story but this isn't my thread hehehe we got her in the end.
 
Congrats on the moose! Good job! I kind of had a similar experience shooting a buck with my 7mm. About an 80 yard shot or so, aimed right behind the front shoulder, nothing, buck didn’t flinch, still standing there. I’m think what the hell, I couldn’t have missed. So gave him a second shot, aim for same spot. Finally he trotted about 50 yards and dropped. It was a double lung shot, I was using 150 gr ballistic tips, both shots were less than an inch apart, I guess he was already dead on his feet but didn’t know it yet.
 
Great story. The two lung shots sound like they did the job - the others weren't necessary but you can't tell until the animal is being cut up. Well done and good shooting. What was your rifle/cartridge/bullet combination?

Curious about this as well. Headed on my first moose hunt next month. Taking a .308 and a 30-06 with 165 gr trophy bonded bear claws and 168 gr ttsx loads for each.

Congrats bro ;)

Btw. what caliber and what bullet did you use?

Was shooting an older browning in 300 win mag with hornady custom international 180gr soft point ammo. It was patterning best of the types i was able to get a hold of and try
 
congrats on the first moose.
The first cow moose I shot was with a 174gr nosler partition in a 7mm rem mag
Shot was perfect broadside out in the open of grassy area a big slow moving creek/beaver pond moved through. About 150 yards and I hit her right in the heart/lung money spot.
Could not have been a better shot alignment and at the hit there was a smack of the bullet and I saw her quiver a little and then put her head back down to chew more grass. I was sure .... 100% sure of my shot but there she stood. So I loaded another round and aimed for the high shoulder spine shot. At the shot she instantly crumpled down and forward in a big splash into the water and disappeared. Lots more to the story but this isn't my thread hehehe we got her in the end.

A good story is always welcome
 
Moose are not known for being overly difficult to kill...but as experienced can soak up lead and take more than one shot to put down cleanly for a quick kill. Animals are like people in that each individual has its own character and constitution. Some just have more tenacity of life and require more "killing" to get the job done! Some tip over and expire from seemingly less than lethal hits.

The there are times when bullets enter between ribs, slice through vitals and exit between ribs and don't fully expand, and while a killing shot, do not seemingly expend as much shock to the animal. making it appear as if it was unhit, due to lack of reaction.
Wet or muddy hides can effect bullet performance, as can ice formed on hide on wet animals in frozen or near frozen conditions. (remember the John Nosler story that led to the development of the Partition bullet?)

Good lesson take away...pack spare ammo with you always... a full magazine is no guarantee of a quick, clean kill!
Better to have and not need, then need and not have!
 
Moose are not known for being overly difficult to kill...but as experienced can soak up lead and take more than one shot to put down cleanly for a quick kill. Animals are like people in that each individual has its own character and constitution. Some just have more tenacity of life and require more "killing" to get the job done! Some tip over and expire from seemingly less than lethal hits.

The there are times when bullets enter between ribs, slice through vitals and exit between ribs and don't fully expand, and while a killing shot, do not seemingly expend as much shock to the animal. making it appear as if it was unhit, due to lack of reaction.
Wet or muddy hides can effect bullet performance, as can ice formed on hide on wet animals in frozen or near frozen conditions. (remember the John Nosler story that led to the development of the Partition bullet?)

Good lesson take away...pack spare ammo with you always... a full magazine is no guarantee of a quick, clean kill!
Better to have and not need, then need and not have!

I had thought that 5 rounds with me would be more than enough, but lesson learned. I was trying to keep from having loose rounds rattling around in my pocket making noise so the 5 round number came from the slots in the shell loops in my vest pocket.
 
I had thought that 5 rounds with me would be more than enough, but lesson learned. I was trying to keep from having loose rounds rattling around in my pocket making noise so the 5 round number came from the slots in the shell loops in my vest pocket.

Congrats on the moose. I tend to put one or two in the lungs then aim for the head and neck to put it down.

I carry 10 extra when moose hunting, mostly for if I get lost. Get a good catridge holder or find some of the Federal factory ammo plastic sleeves, they are perfect IMHO for keeping shells from rattling.
 
I'm sure the moose was mortally wounded with the first shot, but you don't know that for certain until it goes down.

You are correct. Moose is one of the animals that the expression “dead on his feet” describes the animal very well, better to put an extra shot or four and not worry the animal will take off into the swamp, marsh or other difficult area to get at the animal.
 
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