I wonder if it was a bang flop or if he had to follow up.
I've had to do that with a 416 Rem Mag
I wonder if it was a bang flop or if he had to follow up.
I would be fearful of the bullet ricochet off a Moose rib or something though. :s
how many shots to drop the BB?
including Moose? Elk? or flip over to something a bit more wiley like Black Bear?
I don't consider deer to be 'big'.![]()
I'm inquiring what Gatehouse classifies as big game, not what is legal. what looks good on paper does not always translate well into real life.
I saw that he has taken black bear...but I wonder if it was a bang flop or if he had to follow up.
how many shots to drop the BB?
I'm not Gatehouse, however I have shot several head of big game with a 22CF. Including a fair number of black bears, and I don't recall any of them requiring multiple rounds to die. I do however recall one being shot with a 40gr vmax that died so fast on a dead run that he slid on his chin for a few yards. Neither the Hammer of Thor nor a lightning strike would have killed that boar any faster. And no, it wasn't a CNS hit. (Note, I don't intend to expound the virtues of the vmax line as a hunting bullet for big game, that one just happened to be handiest and I needed a rifle in a hurry so it got the nod.)
I smacked one rather large fall black bear with a 75gr Amax a few years ago, that laid down for the long nap about 3' from where he had been standing when the Amax centered the shoulder blade. And exited. I have a pic someplace in my phone of the remains of that bullet after I dug it out of a dead aspen tree behind where he had been standing.
I have seen several black bears killed over the decades, and I can recall a few that required multiple shots over the years. Cartridge choice has much less to do with killing an animal than people want (need?) to believe. A bullet put in the right place the first time will have a much more favorable result than one put in the wrong spot.
I think if everyone was required to use smaller cartridges and bullets to start with, with the admonishment that placement and bullet choice was the most important factor, then the mindset that many people have of "using a big enough cartridge to offset a bad hit" would be greatly reduced.
Most of my friends have hunting age children. And I can't think of any of them that DON'T have a story of an animal NOT shot at by a child, because in my circle all of my hunting companions are enthusiasts. And consequently they have instructed their kids on shot placement and (usually) to wait for a broadside shot to ensure the best chance of success. I can't think of any of them that this fall didn't have deer get away without a shot fired, due to the kids waiting for a broadside shot, as that's what they had been told to do. And a couple of those had deer in close, quartering in, that were a slam dunk shot for the kid, and the cartridge, but the kid waited "cause dad said to shoot them broadside". Point being, you don't see ego in kids, or kids that take shots that they shouldn't "cause I'm shooting a 338 UltraMag, it'll kill'em even if it misses the right spot"...
Cartridge choice has much less to do with killing an animal than people want (need?) to believe. A bullet put in the right place the first time will have a much more favorable result than one put in the wrong spot.
I think if everyone was required to use smaller cartridges and bullets to start with, with the admonishment that placement and bullet choice was the most important factor, then the mindset that many people have of "using a big enough cartridge to offset a bad hit" would be greatly reduced..
I have seen bears, deer and elk shot with 5.56. They were all dead on the spot or shortly thereafter. .

What percentage of factory 224 cal ammo is either metal jacket or varmint type bullets?
Handload sure, but maybe you’d do just as well with reduced loads in larger cals?
Always the same. Big city, weekend warrior hunters condemning the 5.56 and the good ol' country boys who have probably fed their families for years on deer shot with a 22 Cooey, trying to educate them. A 5.56 in the heart/lungs is deadly on deer. End of story. I have ruined too much meat with a 30-06 and prefer the 5.56. Plenty for the job.
I will likley get labeled a troll here. But hey WTH... just cause it's legal, doesn't mean it's right. Just cause you can, doesn't mean you should. Use enough gun no matter what the game. JMO and in my opinion the .223 is to small a caliber for what I consider ethical on deer sized game. Will it kill one, I'm sure it will... but so can a heavy enough rock if you hit one in the head.
And for all you "good ole boys" that have killed em with a .22 rimfires.....we are hunters not poachers....Smarten up and be a responsible sportsperson. Ethics and the critters we all chase deserve better.
And yes I said ethics i have mine you can have your own. If its legal in your province then its your own choice




























