I agree with you. Use a large enough cartridge that you can shoot well. If it’s not a reasonable cartridge for the game you’re hunting, practice until you’re proficient with one that is.I never advocated shooting anything up the ass
I just like having enough gun to blow through both shoulders of everything I shoot after I wait for them to turn.
Makes tracking really easy when they are DRT
I think the reason small cartridges kill better than expected is that they are placed accurately. No question a bigger cartridge has the potential to kill more cleanly given the same shot placement. The problem is that they often aren’t. People discount the importance of adequate cartridge performance on game (see 6.5 CM for the elk) as well as the adverse effect of recoil on shot placement (see Kevin Robertson’s comments on Wby cartridges for big game hunting in his books).
In other words, it’s an optimization problem for each individual hunter, not an absolute answer that bigger is better or that shot placement is the only thing that matters. Which goes back to my contention that there is less difference between cartridges than we suppose. I’m narrowing my hunting cartridges down to 223 (coyote, varmints), 6.5 Prc (deer, pronghorn, small plains game), 300 PRC(elk, moose, large plains game), and 375 H&H (large plains game, DG). With the possible addition of a 6.5 CM L hand for my boys to use as a first game rifle. Limited overlap between cartridges, and each one ideal for a certain class of game.
I contend there is little difference in effectiveness on deer sized game between the 6.5 PRC and 300 PRC. But for elk, there clearly is. LOL I think at this point I’m just rambling, but I do want to agree with you about having enough gun.