Video of giraffe harvested with 6mm

What is being overlooked here is the impressionable (gullable?) viewers of such videos whom are not all that experienced in the field or inclined to seek confirmation or opinions on forums such as this.

In this example, the intent of the shoot is clear - one shot kill with a 6mm.
Yeah, dumb but as it is, the giraffe succumbed to the shot about as expected and probably within the timeframe as it would in most rifle situations and certainly most archery hunts.
Good idea? Not in my book but neither is bowhunting DG or giraffes for that matter.

What has been entirely overlooked in this discussion is that, in Africa, there is far more accountability on the hunter than there is in the US for example.
I have heard more accounts of lost game in the last ten years than should be acceptable - the big difference is that a lost animal in Africa has a cost. A lost animal in North America is usually just ignored. It's more difficult to confirm a hit, miss or misplaced shot when using a smallbore. This likely results in less followup and an inclination to claim a "miss" rather than stomach the lost animal scenario. A 6.5 that doesn't pass through is not all that easy to track - not a lot of blood trail as I've been told. This video certainly bears that out somewhat - would like to see the entry wound.

This, in my opinion, has as much to do with the adulation of the newer 6.5s as it does with the trend of long range sniping of game animals and those producing videos of both have some blame to be shouldered.
The giraffe was shot with a 6mm (.243). The entry wound would be a round hole slightly less than 1/4" in diameter. Obviously there would be no exit. Had the shot been slightly off, tracking the animal would have been difficult. Of course, being inside of a fenced enclosure with a professional tracker or two would make it somewhat less complicated.
 
The reason is stupid.

I avoid using the word kill because of sensitivities around here.
Harvest always gave me the sense that I own the land I'm harvesting from, like a farmer would, so it seemed that in an attempt to be accurate, it wasn't.
If someone says to me, what do you hunt? I assume the implication is that I have successfully brought home that animal. And that's good enough for me because the statement carries the implication and I don't have to explain why I'm a heartless murderer of fluffy animals.
There is nothing wrong with the word harvest.
In our national parks legislation the definition of hunt terms chase , pursue, harass , kill, or interfere with an animal. I could check the exact definition.
National Parks regulate the kangaroo industry where a professional applies for a ‘Trappers license” this allows them to harm wildlife under the licence for commercial purposes. The professional has to complete a game harvester course to to apply for the licence.
Since the only allowable way to harvest Kangaroos commercially is to shoot them under a spotlight and they are selectively targeted by a licensed professional. I consider it harvesting as they take what they want from the available population.

Property owners can get a permit to harm for culling purposes where numbers are high.
 
Apparently the term "Harvest" in relation to animals has been used for well over a couple of centuries. If I remember correctly it is claimed to have been used in ancient times. All this was shown to me when I was against using the harvest term for taking an animal as to me the term was for cropping.
 
Terminology question: What's the difference between going out and searching for an animal, and actually killing it? Both functions are "hunting." ;-)

Other than that, I agree with everything you wrote.
For me hunting is the general term for the pursuit of game, up to and including killing it. Whether you shoot something or not, you are still hunting.

I use killing to refer to that specific part of the hunt if it comes up.

I’ve never liked harvesting and I feel like it was largely adopted in the US to counter the idea that hunters are just bloodthirsty killers. I don’t think it works though.
 
For me hunting is the general term for the pursuit of game, up to and including killing it. Whether you shoot something or not, you are still hunting.

I use killing to refer to that specific part of the hunt if it comes up.

I’ve never liked harvesting and I feel like it was largely adopted in the US to counter the idea that hunters are just bloodthirsty killers. I don’t think it works though.
Using the word "harvest" in lieu of what is clearly meant as "killing", " taking" or "shooting" seems to.me to be intellectually dishonest. I will not use it to describe what is a natural act just to save the feelings of a Disney trained snowflake.
 
IMG_0612.png
 
Energy and hydraulic shock, if I push a broadsword through the lungs of a giraffe it will die very quick. The energy deposited is less than any cartridge intended for hunting, there will no "shock".

Off courses will the giraffe also die if I push a 1/4" steel rod through its lungs, it will just take more time.

What do I mean? Have a coffee and look into the fire. It is not about speed and energy.
 
Using the word "harvest" in lieu of what is clearly meant as "killing", " taking" or "shooting" seems to.me to be intellectually dishonest. I will not use it to describe what is a natural act just to save the feelings of a Disney trained snowflake.

I had not thought about it in those terms and now that I have, I agree with you. I don’t like “harvest” either but I have used it.

On the same subject, we want to kill cleanly. In nature, that is rarely the case. All we have to do is look at any predator, they kill things a bite at a time. Keeping that in mind, why do we get so wrapped up in not letting an animal suffer when clearly that is not the case in their natural cycle of life? I like to think as their stewards we are better than that. I wonder what others think.
 

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