What was your most difficult shot?

steve white

Bronze supporter
AH legend
Joined
Feb 9, 2018
Messages
2,684
Reaction score
6,229
Location
dallas tx
Articles
2
Member of
dallas safari club, mannlicher collectors assoc., era
Hunted
Cape buffalo, plains game
This could involve range, speed, surprise, danger, or even the difficulty seeing kudu in the thick spekboom brush of the eastern cape. You tell us what you had to deal with or overcome. Hopefully we can all learn something and up the skills in our hunting toolbox.
 
Not Africa, and not a firearm...

In 2009 I went back to visit family in Kansas, over Christmas. I bought a NR archery deer tag. As luck would have it I picked up swine flu right before getting there. I was feverish and miserable the whole trip. Did that keep me from hunting? Nooooo.....

Long story short, on my last morning I was hiking out, after pulling my stand. I had seen a couple of does go into a tangle of plum thickets around several cottonwoods a half mile from my stand. The wind was in my favor so on the way out I angled towards the tangle, without knowing if they were still there.

They were. They started to come out as I approached, unawareof me. I dropped to my knees. I brought my bow up and drew, ready in case a shot was offered. I had to lean back to avoid brush between us. And that was when the stand-off started.

They spotted me but didn't spook. I didn't have a shot. They were as still as statues, staring holes in me. I managed to let off without spooking them but was still on my knees and still leaning back. They had me pinned down like that for over 10 minutes.

Eventually they turned to go back into the tangle. Ignoring the blinding pain in my knees and back, I drew and shot at the closest, dropping an arrow into her boiler room. She dropped in sight. The distance was right at 50 yards, and I still had a slight fever.

Not sure there was a lesson to learn from this other than sometimes it's better to be lucky, and persistence pays.
 
That’s a difficult question to answer….but I guess my last moose hunt. First two hunts in Alaska hadn’t produced a legal bull. So, I was on my third hunt chasing a moose in BC. I’d only seen a solitary bull winkle in a week. 3 days until the hunt was over we bumped a decent bull. He was running. Two shots at between 100 and 140 meters and he was down. At the first shot he showed no sign of being hit and I assumed a tree may have copped the bullet. Second shot he dropped. During the recovery we found 2 bullet wounds, both wounds would have been fatal.

I probably would’ve have taken the shot under normal circumstances. But I knew this was my last moose hunt.

I’d always been told that moose are easy to hunt and that the only hard part was the carry out. I was also told that I’d probably be shooting a stationary animal in close. But it wasn’t to be and I’m pretty happy about that.

Oh yeah….they were correct about the carry out.

Shots were taken off hand, after a short jog, with my R8 in 30/06.

IMG_5746.jpeg
IMG_5675.jpeg
 
Last edited by a moderator:
This could involve range, speed, surprise, danger, or even the difficulty seeing kudu in the thick spekboom brush of the eastern cape. You tell us what you had to deal with or overcome. Hopefully we can all learn something and up the skills in our hunting toolbox.
@steve white - my most difficult shot involves ANY Animal I “really want” - nothing to do with distance, angle, time allowed to settle in and get the shot off….NO, it’s all about “How much do I WANT that animal”? And also, how much time do I have to think about it? If a GREAT buck or bull Elk just “steps out” - no time to get all ramped up…just “shoot” - I have no problems. However, if I see that big rack, walking thru trees, slowly coming in, barely presenting a shot or a poor angle and I MUST WAIT — that becomes a difficult shot. Seeing a “nice” whitetail Buck at 200 yrds - easy to stay calm, hold steady, squeeze…like shooting a ‘target’. But for a whitetail Buck “Bigger then anything I’ve ever taken” = WOW, heart starts pounding, desire to just-shoot-now before he gets away etc.. And that makes the shot difficult - For ME. I must concentrate, get cross hairs steady, don’t rush, and slowly “squeeze” that trigger. When I was younger, Buck fever caused me to miss 2 bucks and make a poor shot on a 3rd and they were just a spike & 5 pointer —- but they were the BEST bucks I’d ever seen at the time and I got excited. Now, I’m calmer at most shots and even with the bigger animals I can Hold-it-together and make a good shot, really took some discipline. However, if I ever see the next World Record Whitetail at 75 yrds — I wouldn’t bet my House that I’ll hit it !!
 
Probably not what you had in mind...

Asking my girlfriend to marry me. The thoughts of rejection were crippling. 30 years of marriage later it turns out to be the best "shot" I ever took, even if it was tough at the time.
1732446712565.png
 
I think it was to shoot this deer. The story goes back more than 30 years in the north of the Mongolia. We spotted the Elk on a ridge at nightfall, very good stand in the moonlight but quite far away. There was not much time to approach it and I had to decide quickly whether to shoot or not. I did not have a rangefinder with me so I had to estimate the distance using the reticle of my scope and taking the size of the game into account. I estimated the distance to be 400 yards and, taking into account the external ballistics of a 19g TUG bullet from a 9,3x64 Brenneke cartridge, I aimed and shot about 20 inches over the shoulder of the deer. Hit and the deer rolled down the slope, but at first we did not know which side of the ridge because of to the dusk. We found it dead after a short time. Perfect shot placement in the heart area. I was very lucky, things could have turned out very differently.

Scan 14.jpeg


The technic used is surely familiar to some of you. It comes from a time when rangefinders were not yet readily available. The problem is to know the size of the game well. It only works, regardless of the magnification, with European scopes. I had a reticle Nr.1 in my scope.

entfernungsschaetzen_absehen1.png

Formel.png




1u2_bildebene.png

 
IMG_1512.jpeg

My third & final man eating Royal Bengal tiger, April 1989. I shot him from a department speed boat with my iron sighted 7x57mm Mauser E.J Churchill Gun Makers Model Deluxe. Broadside lung shot with Winchester Super X 175Gr soft point from 75-80 yards. He succumbed to his wound an entire day later.

I still don’t know how I made that shot. The man eater had seen us and gotten alerted. He was just about to turn and make off into the thickets, when I saw his exposed broadside and made a desperate shot at his shoulder.
 
This could involve range, speed, surprise, danger, or even the difficulty seeing kudu in the thick spekboom brush of the eastern cape. You tell us what you had to deal with or overcome. Hopefully we can all learn something and up the skills in our hunting toolbox.
For me it was last year shooting my 400 J at the distance I had practiced on my farm at 300 yards. I had to trust my holdover and trust my practice. I never would have taken a shot at that distance with that caliber unless I had done the practice work knowing exactly what that gun would do at that distance. My point is I never thought I would have this distant shot in Africa with this caliber but I did. On all my previous PG hunt lower calibers taken.
 
Most difficult shot? Is that the shot you knew you shouldn’t have taken but got lucky on? Or the shot you knew you shouldn’t have taken, did anyway and muffed it? :)

6x6 bull elk 90 yards- also my largest elk. A long time ago. 54 cal Kit Carson Hawken replica round ball BP cap lock, open sights. Gun I built using H&H barrel and Dewey lock and trigger. Elk quartering toward standing. Shot placement had to be perfect at seam between neck and shoulder. Prone, rifle rested on low branch of small tree. One shot no second chance. Reflecting back… some chance of failure and lost cripple so shouldn’t have taken shot…. hindsight is always 20:20. Fired, huge smoke screen in still air, bull crashed through brush heading laterally to the right. Tracked digging hoof tracks (no blood) 100 yards to find bull dead, piled head long into a tree.

Coyote running full speed angling away, 270 Win M70, 130 grain normal deer load. Lead a few body lengths at 490 yards, squeeze trigger watch coyote roll/flop to stop in cloud of dust. Did it twice, nearly identical specifics and with a witness both times a couple years apart. Difficult… I guess! But the reality is nearly 100 % luck dependent. :)
 

Forum statistics

Threads
57,911
Messages
1,242,876
Members
102,313
Latest member
JooVitorJz
 

 

 

Latest profile posts

Grz63 wrote on Werty's profile.
(cont'd)
Rockies museum,
CM Russel museum and lewis and Clark interpretative center
Horseback riding in Summer star ranch
Charlo bison range and Garnet ghost town
Flathead lake, road to the sun and hiking in Glacier NP
and back to SLC (via Ogden and Logan)
Grz63 wrote on Werty's profile.
Good Morning,
I plan to visit MT next Sept.
May I ask you to give me your comments; do I forget something ? are my choices worthy ? Thank you in advance
Philippe (France)

Start in Billings, Then visit little big horn battlefield,
MT grizzly encounter,
a hot springs (do you have good spots ?)
Looking to buy a 375 H&H or .416 Rem Mag if anyone has anything they want to let go of
Erling Søvik wrote on dankykang's profile.
Nice Z, 1975 ?
Tintin wrote on JNevada's profile.
Hi Jay,

Hope you're well.

I'm headed your way in January.

Attending SHOT Show has been a long time bucket list item for me.

Finally made it happen and I'm headed to Vegas.

I know you're some distance from Vegas - but would be keen to catch up if it works out.

Have a good one.

Mark
 
Top