you win!!!500 NE 85 yards East Ranch near Port MansfieldView attachment 677395
I have hunted a lot of places with a number of different rifle calibers. I have killed sable and waterbuck with a 7x57 along with other antelope and deer. You can indeed kill a nilgai with one. With one, I would seriously estimate your chance of recovery is 75% less than with a .338 or .375. This is a function of post shot tracking rather than accuracy. Eventually you will find a guide who doesn’t care. After all you are paying a trophy fee whether the bull goes to the taxidermist or rots in the pasture.This a hunt I plan on doing in the next couple of years myself. As for me I plan on using my 7x57. I shoot ot very well I have come to find and enjoy shooting it more than the others I have that are way more powerful but also painful.
If im told no by one outfitter I’ll find a different one until I hopefully find one that places more credence on marksmanship than horsepower.
They already are.I'd just use a 9.3x62 on those. Does anyone think those Nilgai will ever become free-roaming there like deer?
They have been for almost a hundred years. Like whitetail, they are easy to simply shoot behind a game fence at a feeder. Free range they are a truly great game animal to actually hunt.I'd just use a 9.3x57 or 62 on those. Does anyone think those Nilgai will ever become free-roaming there like deer?
Amen! A truly wild open space nilgia hunt, spot and stalking them in the daylight is the only sporting way to hunt them, I truly despise the way people hunt them with thermal scopes and canned AR platforms and think they accomplished something sportingThey have been for almost a hundred years. Like whitetail, they are easy to simply shoot behind a game fence at a feeder. Free range they are a truly great game animal to actually hunt.