I seem to have struck a nerve with my opinion... I have hunted both long(ish) range and short range stalking. It takes planning and prepping to set up a stand or a blind and to put up cameras and keep checking them for 6 weeks before a hunt. It doesn't take much skill to drive around with binoculars and get out of the truck because you spotted an animal a kilometer away that has no idea you're there until it falls over dead because you bought expensive toys.
I enjoy the 50 yard kill much more than a 400 yard shot. It's just more rewarding to me. Unfortunately, my 50 yard rifle of choice (45 long colt) was excluded by the hunting regs in my province this year, so this year's deer was taken with a .308 at 350 yards.
Everyone enjoys different ways and I'm not telling anyone what they can or can't do. I find short range more challenging and rewarding and that is the kind of hunting the OP seems to be having luck with and was feeling that the long range was intimidating. My point to the OP is to enjoy what he's already doing. But, CGN being CGN... I get told I'm nonesense and full of BS and whatever else. Flame away flaming flamers
The nerve you struck has been struck FAR too many times by guys who think as you seem to. No flaming was intended, simply trying to educate. You are not alone and my posts were not directly aimed at you, you simply provided the opening for furtherment of dialogue. Unfortunately many guys follow your thinking about LR hunting, it is an international thing. In South Africa years ago the PH I was with completely lost it on me when I dumped a 2800 lb Eland at 690 yards with my 338 LAI. 1 shot, bang flop, done. The situation was I was already set up on a lesser animal at much closer range when I noticed the big bull in the distance. Ranged him dialed up and let him have it. We performed a necropsy where it died and the PH was blown away that shot placement could be so precise at that range.
Many "hunters" figure hunting requires crawling up an animals rectum and killing it from inside to truly be called hunting. What might they think about the very early Canadians driving herds of buffalo off of a cliff?
Very seldom if ever is true and ethical LR hunting simply driving around and shooting an animal from distance as it actually takes more scouting to determine things like shooting over properties that one does not have permission to access, rivers can get in the way to make recovery far more difficult and so on.
Most of us spend many weeks scouting not only for animals but also for terrain that is conducive.
The group of us that I hunt with wear out a barrel or 2 each year practicing and a TON of time on the loading bench. Consistent hits on a 5" gong at 1000 yards is the goal but just like close range shooting things can and do happen.
A large number of LR hunters that I know get rather enraged by some of the TV shows that try to depict LR hunting for promotion of their business. Trust me the majority of us dedicated LR hunters are not at all like that.
The ugly fact is there are some guys who will spend the money on gear but then fail to learn to use it properly and then further fail when it comes to becoming proficient at shooting it, developing proper ammo for the job. Something that many guys fail to take into account is that bullets that work great at closer ranges can fail miserably at long range and bullets that work incredibly well at long range usually fail miserably at close range.
LR hunting really is NOT as simple as it might seem.