We sure have had a lot of threads on, "Is a 37 Nightingale good enough for deer and moose?"
It sort of started with a 30-30, worked down, with no end of postings, good and bad, on the 243, now to the 223.
This is just to let you know that when it gets down to, "Is a 22 rimfire, using shorts, enough for deer," I have some pertinent information to add.
Answer. It will kill a large whittail buck, but you have to be careful where you hit him.
Question. Will the large deer suffer?
Answer. I know one that didn't. He kept on eating alfalfa, while he was being shot in the ribs with the 22 rimfire shorts. He slightly flinched when a bullet hit him, like he would flinch from a fly bite. Then, his legs wobbled and he fell over, dead.
Butchering him showed that if the tiny bullet hit a rib on the way in, it didn't get any further. But if it went between the ribs, it went through the lungs and in at least one case, broke a rib on the other side.
But damn, I forgot. This was in sustanance hunting and animals didn't know any better than to just die when hit. The present variety of animals come with armour plate hides, that require a huge rifle and bullets with names that one never heard of and can't even pronounce, before the experts on here agree the rifle is satisfactory for hunting.
Don't giggle too much guys, but back in '68 when I was 13, I took 2 deer
in the front yard flowerbed with my Cooey Model 39. Not at the same time
though. They were a couple of months apart. The ammo I used was Imperial
.22 short high speed w/copper-washed bullets.
In each case I put the little pill at the base of the skull at the neck junction.
The critters dropped like a sack-o-crap, twitched a bit and were done.
The shooting distance was not more than 20 ft. as I was shooting from
my parents bedroom window when the bugers were head-down, feeding
in said flowerbed. They dressed out around 80 lb. or so. Not real large,
but really tasty.
I still have the Cooey ,still shoots as good as ever, and NO, it ain't fer sale.
Here it be.
To answer my fellow Islander's question, the .223 would be adequate for
a seasoned hunter and consistently good shot, but if said hunter gets
"buck fever"and is an averge shot, then a bigass ol' magnum or similar rifle
won't help. Usually it makes this things worse if the shooter is not
accustomed to the blast and recoil of the rifle, and gets induced flinch.
The .223 is great for training youngin's to shoot a more powerful rifle than
a .22 rimfire though, but I tend to lean towards the larger calibers just
cause they're fun to load for and excellent killers on Island game. I use
no load which pushes the lead bullet past 2000 fps. and they are of
sufficient mass to do the job cleanly.
Another thing to consider are bears which are all over our neck of the
woods and are getting big. I've seen a few 400+ pounders around here
lately and I'll never trust a bear to behave.
It's all up to personal taste, but it pays to remember;
Get used to what you got,
Don't load the gun too hot,
Then put the bullet on the spot.