That website worked great for me after following your recommendations. I went back today to make some more, the website isn't working anymore. Anyone have ideas on what happened to it or have a new website that is similar.
Thanks!
You know I was not that impressed with the burger in Hatch at all. I drew the stallion this year in November, never thought I would draw an on range tag but here we are. I have been watching all the videos I can to be better at judging them but I am still struggling between them.
Hey guys I was cleaning out my closet and came across a half box of 223WSSM Winchester 55grain silvertips. I sold that gun a long time ago and have no need for them. If you still have one of them laying around, I would love to get them to someone who could use them. Shoot me a PM.
As with anything biological it all depends. Every situation and population is different. They all have different issues keeping them from reaching carrying capacity. Without knowing much about that population, the first thing I would look at is buck to doe ratios in the area.
I have a load built up that shoots good (1/2 MOA) using N165 but that using a accubond. I think find something that shoots decent in your gun and run with in any of those bullets. I personally dont get caught up in calibers and building the perfect load. I would rather be out scouting than...
I like bonded for them because they don't blow up and ruin capes and meat. I have lost a few capes and whole front shoulders to eldxs and ballistic tipped bullets out of smaller caliber and bigger caliber guns. But at the end of the day the best thing for antelope is what shoots best in your gun.
Shoot your 7mag, if you shoot it better its the better choice. I took a SD antelope last year with my 7Mag loaded with 160 accubonds and it had much less meat loss than my last antelope shot with a 6.5creedmoor and 6.5PRC. The best gun to take on any hunt is the gun you shoot the best.