The curse of would-be-snipers...
There, I said it!
I do not often refer my relationship with Huntershill in my posts, purposefully I might add, but this time I will because it is germane to the discussion.
To make a long story short, and based on private candid discussions in the PH shacks of the 6 safari camps that Huntershill own and operate, with over a dozen PHs: for every 600 or 800 yards killing shot on YouTube, there are many, many - let me repeat: MANY - shots fired. Thank the good Lord a lot of these shots are misses, but a number are also hitting animals at random from shot jaws to gut wounds.
In the best cases, another half dozen rounds bring the animal down from sheer lead weight. In the worst cases, the animal escapes and dies miserable later. In many cases, a precious hunting day, or two, is lost tracking a wounded animal.
In summary, aside from the rather uncommon clean kill at 600 or 800 yards, the animal suffers entirely needlessly. This is unethical. Period.
Please, spare me rushing to bang the keyboard and to lick the stamp for the hate mail, I personally ring 12" steel at 1,000 meters on a fairly regular basis with my civilian clone Mk13 rifle (Accuracy International chassis with long action Remington 700 receiver and .300 Win Mag 5 groves Remington Defense barrel), so I know darn well that it can be done, but there is very little in common between taking out the Kestrel and ballistic App, locking front bipod and rear monopod, doping the wind on a flat well known range, shooting without "trophy pressure" at an immobile target, etc. ... and hunting.
Yes, there are clients doing all this in Africa, and doing it well, but they are few and far between, and even if in my own mind they are robbing themselves of the best part in their safari: the hunting, as long as they do it well, I recognize that it is their right. But with them, the PH's challenge is NOT to hunt, but to find the shooting-range-like setting that will allow such shots. This is rarely the case, although it can be done from hillside to hillside in the Eastern Cape, but Lord oh Lord, the wind factor shooting across canyon or small valley...
And yes, there are also the clients who think they can, but cannot, and litter the landscape with wounded animals... Long range shooting is not so much about the hardware, which is easy to purchase, but about the technical knowledge, training and practice, which few have...
The curse of the 6.5 Creedmoor...
To add insult to injury, because darn few can actually carry all day a heavy weight appropriate caliber sniper rifle (.300 to .338), and because darn few enjoy the recoil of a hunting-weight rifle of .300 to .338 caliber shooting prone, we now see a flood of low-recoil, long-range TARGET rifles.
I have nothing personally against the 6.5 Creedmoor (it is certainly as good as my 1903 6.5x54 MS which needs no introduction), but WHEN WILL FOLKS FINALLY UNDERSTAND THAT A 6.5 CREEDMOR BULLET AT 800 YARDS DOES NOT CARRY THE ENERGY NECESSARY TO KNOCK DOWN
RELIABLY A KUDU?
The problem with these paper-punchers, that have genuine 600 to 800 range potential, is that even if there is a lethal hit, larger animals (Kudu, Wildebeest, etc.) may not even register the hit, and it is generally too far to hear the slap of the bullet. So what should the PH do: follow every animal shot at, on the potential that it may have been hit?
Shooting or hunting?
Yes,
Red Leg,
CoElkHunter,
Kevin Peacocke,
mark-hunter,
uplander01, etc. are obviously right: there is no need for 600 to 800 yards shooting in Africa, and yes, this is shooting, not hunting.
Does this mean that BDC scopes are bad? Not necessarily. I now use BDC scopes because they allow more precise bullet placement even at 200 or 300 yards, not shooting at the proverbial "boiler room" or 6" to 12" (depending on animal size) "vital area" but shooting precisely at the top of the heart.
This is especially beneficial when hunting small PG and MG (Mountain Game), Vaal Rhebok comes to mind. Even the .257 Wby 100 gr drops 5" at 350 yards when sighted for a + or - 3" MPBR...
This is also especially beneficial when hunting PG with heavier one-rifle-safari calibers such as the .375 H&H 300 gr, which suffer a bit from rainbow trajectory. Sure, "over the back" hold works, and even "one foot over the back" hold can work, but there is little arguing that turning the BDC to 325 and drilling precisely the top of the heart of a shy Eland is better...