ILCAPO
AH enthusiast
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2011
- Messages
- 292
- Reaction score
- 155
- Location
- Northern Virginia
- Member of
- Private club on friend's land in Augusta County, Virginia
- Hunted
- USA (Colorado, Alabama, Virginia)
Sestoppleman,
I think from my reading that your conclusion of the Kudu not being all that tough is precisely because you had the right gun! LOL!
This said, the 7x57 Mauser has taken every animal on the continent in the past, so within that cartridge's range, and with sufficient skill as a shooter, why not? And then of course the .308 Winchester is a classic.
When I asked him, the senior PH with Africanskyhunting said the two most popular and prolific cartridges he's seen used by hunters with their safaris are the .308 Winchester and .30-06 Springfield. He said they're sufficient for all the plains game, as long as the shot it good and within reasonable range.
A friend hunted with him a couple years ago using one of the PH's rifles, in 270 WSM. He took an impala, a wildebeest, and a blesbok. He said the first two went down right away, but the blesbok had to be tracked, and shot four times, and even then he had to finish it off with a knife! He didn't tell me where the shot placement was on either. But the ranges these animals were take were from 50 to 150 yards. No long shots.
I think from my reading that your conclusion of the Kudu not being all that tough is precisely because you had the right gun! LOL!
This said, the 7x57 Mauser has taken every animal on the continent in the past, so within that cartridge's range, and with sufficient skill as a shooter, why not? And then of course the .308 Winchester is a classic.
When I asked him, the senior PH with Africanskyhunting said the two most popular and prolific cartridges he's seen used by hunters with their safaris are the .308 Winchester and .30-06 Springfield. He said they're sufficient for all the plains game, as long as the shot it good and within reasonable range.
A friend hunted with him a couple years ago using one of the PH's rifles, in 270 WSM. He took an impala, a wildebeest, and a blesbok. He said the first two went down right away, but the blesbok had to be tracked, and shot four times, and even then he had to finish it off with a knife! He didn't tell me where the shot placement was on either. But the ranges these animals were take were from 50 to 150 yards. No long shots.