Something about guns brings out the intergenerational kleptomaniac.
Lol, so true! My dad was very much a one-gun guy. He simply could not understand why I wanted any more than a .22, a 12-ga and a .303 Enfield. He did practice throughout the year with a .22, and the traditional yearly pre-moose-hunt trip to the gravel pit to put a couple boxes through the .303 was always a good time for us. Yet, in his later years, he started to enjoy trying out and then using various of my rifles when we hunted.
I don't know where I fit in the hunter-shooter spectrum. I love shooting almost any rifle, centerfire or rimfire or airgun. I am a big fan of doing mag dumps...as long as I'm shooting a singleshot rifle.

I detest reloading, but do it because I'm a cheap bastidge. Once I find the load a gun likes, I'll use it for years without a thought towards eking out an extra 50fps or trimming an inch off the long-distance trajectory. If I start experimenting with a new powder or a new bullet, it usually means that I can't find any of the old one available to buy.
So, shooting is fun...but hunting is much more important than that. I like shooting steel at extended ranges, but I simply will not snipe at critters much beyond a couple hundred yards anymore. I don't find it fun or satisfying or appealing at all; when I did it I always regretted robbing myself of the fun of stalking closer. Somebody in this thread was deriding the idea of shooting an animal which is so far away that it is unaware of your presence. I think that getting close to an animal and taking it unawares is the essence of hunting. But...to each his own.
I can't wait to hear what happens to this thread once a certain newer member finds it and takes a big dump in the middle of it. Most of you can probably figure out who I mean; if you can't...stay tuned...