Jay Kelley
AH veteran
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2011
- Messages
- 232
- Reaction score
- 363
- Location
- Levelland, TX
- Media
- 1
- Articles
- 1
- Member of
- NRA, DSC
- Hunted
- USA (Kansas, Virginia, Texas)
100 yards with iron sights, 250 with a scope is about my limit.
There is a big difference between “knowing” you can make a shot and “thinking” you can make a shot. When you know, it happens automatically and there is little, if any, doubt. When you think you can make a shot, the icy fingers of doubt are present and that is when something can go just wrong enough to make for disappointment.
To learn and get better, we need to strive to improve and push our own limits. Finding that balance is tough. I think if NA hunters had to pay $5k on a wounded elk and be done… they would not be inclined to take long shots.
I agree 100%. This very topic was the subject of a long and at times heated discussion between multiple hunters in Limpopo during a June hunt.There are a few things to bear in mind when we talk about distances and hunting. The first - well, and example. My son arrived for his first hunting trip in Africa - a college graduation present - and told me he could hit a 6" gong at 1000 yards (he'd been to SAAM school). I told him that was great, but gongs are flat and animals aren't. He'd have to calculate angles when he was shooting animals - something not important at the range. Know where the vitals are and where to place the shot to hit them. Not as easy as it sounds. Secondly, animals also move, while gongs tend to stay pretty still. You have all the time in the world to line up that gong, and maybe a few seconds to line up the animal. You might have longer, but you can't count on it.
The other thing is a matter of personal values. To me, the best part of hunting - real hunting - is getting as close as I can to the target. Sometimes that's impossible (a mountain nyala 390 yards across a valley), but most of the time, a little work and you are amply rewarded. I like to keep my shots to less than 100 yards. As much as I try not to be judgmental, by the time you get out more than, say, 300 yards, absent exceptional circumstances, the more you're target shooting and not hunting. And if you're target shooting, I don't think you should be doing it on live animals. Just my opinion.
I know many will disagree with me, and that's their prerogative. Just as it's mine to hold that view!
I agree 100%. This very topic was the subject of a long and at times heated discussion between multiple hunters in Limpopo during a June hunt.
I'm not sure what the distance is, but we all know that at some point the verb "hunting" no longer applies and "shooting" does.
Was the six hour search after the shot? I don't classify that as hunting. It's a salvage operation. But good on you for sticking with it.Sure, but that can be also discussed.
It all depends on where and what you hunt. Africa is not a good example of what long range shooting at game is concerned. Different when you have to hunt elk, Ibex or sheep in Central Asia for example. If you are aiming for such a hunt, you have to adapt to long range shooting. Alternatively, one does not such hunts, but saying upfront I will never do it is not exactly ideal. I also prefer to shoot at 50 yards at a buffalo than at 500 yards at an Ibex, but if I has planned the latter hunt, I knew that the case can occur, what also happened several times.
As I have already written, this type of hunting remains hazardous, and to say that one is always 100% successful would be a lie. I had to follow an Elk under extremely difficult conditions in the high mountains of the Altai, and did not find it until the next morning.
The elk and in the middle the one and only local hunter who was willing to share with me the hardness of the 6 hours search at 3000m above sea level. I can understand why some of us dislike long range shooting at game.
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My joy was very moderate, but these are the risks of long range shooting.
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Fortunately one is often successful at long range. An elk shot around 350 yards at nightfall. One shot kill, on the place.
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Ibex at around 300 yards. Everything for example, I have more, but only to prove that, despite some statements, long range shooting at game, in reasonable acceptable distances, can count as part of hunting.
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Was the six hour search after the shot? I don't classify that as hunting. It's a salvage operation. But good on you for sticking with it.
Was the six hour search after the shot? I don't classify that as hunting. It's a salvage operation. But good on you for sticking with it.
I have a nearly perfect hunting record. I wounded a pig in New Zealand once and I didn’t recover a roe deer for two days, but I’d say I’ve taken around 200 game animals on several continents. I wouldn’t say it’s because I’m such a good shot. I’ve made some bad shots and missed more than a few. I’d say it’s because I’m willing to reload and shoot again. Nothing bothers me more than watching hunters admire their shot when they can shoot again. I also watch what shots I’ll take. Having snow on ground, having a tracking dog, having good opportunity for a second or third shot, asking PH to back your shot, all play into what shots I’ll take and which I won’t. Wounding an animal is bound to happen at some point, but I think it’s used as an excuse to justify taking a poor shot too often. Nothing bothers me more than hearing repeated shots at last light and finding dead gut shot deer on my land after season has ended in Pennsylvania. I know they just shot at a glimpse of a deer or buck running at end of a long field.Well said! I like to LOOK at animals a long ranges... but for my shooting, I like to be as close as I can possibly be. It really sucks to lose a game animal. Anyone who has never done it and claims they have a perfect shot record because they're "such a good shot" hasn't been hunting very long. That's also why I try to never take headshots on large game.
No criticism intended. The "hunt" for me ends when I have hit the animal. Up to that point it was a matter of pursuit on relatively equal terms. After the animal is hit and has to be finished, it's no longer hunting. But nonetheless it is an essential component of the task. Perhaps even more noble than hunting if done correctly and, as in this case, with due diligence. Indeed, I would say his diligence was extraordinary. But it's still just cleaning up, not really hunting in the strictest sense.I'm not really sure what you are trying to bring to the table with this comment?
Things like this happen, it is 100% part of hunting. No one that I know of wants this to happen. It does and @grand veneur was sharing experiences of what can happen when hunting. He is being honest with some of the pitfalls.
Your last paragraph is what most long range hunters do not seem to care about. I do still call it hunting, many won’t and that’s fine. As far as long shots on game, you better have a ripping fast bullet or there are too many “what ifs”. Western US hunting is far different than anything else on the planet IMO. The amount of time it could take to re position for a closer shot may take an entire day. I’ve shot steel out to 1450ish on BLM land, but I don’t think I could attempt anything past 600-650, unless the game was sleeping standing up.To me this question is totally situationally dependent. In Alabama I am typically hunting with a 9.3x62 or 7x57. 300 is an easy shot with those rigs, 400 is doable if the conditions are right. I use simple German no 4 reticles sighted for 200.
Out west I’m shooting a 6.5 PRC. I am shooting sub 4” groups at 600 with that rig from hunting positions. Unless the wind is ripping, a 600 yard shot in decent light conditions is responsible with that rifle. Cross canyon opportunities can make this shot a reality.
I get really concerned with time of flight on the really long range stuff (800+). At extreme ranges the target can walk out of the shot while the bullet is in flight. The result can be something none of us want no matter how good the shot is.
I read this statement in Magnum magazine " Remember that shooting small groups from a solid bench-rest position may satisfy you, but it can also give you false confidence in your shooting ability. Your biggest grouping (not the smallest) from a field shooting position at any given distance represents the maximum range at which you should engage an animal. If 200m is the longest range at which you can hit a six-inch target with three consecutive shots, then that is your maximum range for taking body shots on springbuck. For brain shots at the same distance, you must be able to hit a tennis ball-size target consistently"
It got me thinking- I have seen many pics of tiny groups ( I assume benched groups) often with large bores like 416 and 458 Lott. I like the guideline above. He also says in the article- Do not trust ballistic programs and dialing turrets without testing at the distances on a target. What distance can you hit a 6" target with 3 consecutive shots ?