AntelopeEater
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2023
- Messages
- 142
The first gun I ever harvested a big game animal with was the guide's .270 rifle on a wild pig hunt, it worked great.
The guide told me to drop the bullet right behind the pig's shoulder. I missed a little and the bullet blew out both shoulders.
Technically wasted some meat, but the pig dropped instantly except for some twitching on the ground.
More recently, I did a guided ram hunt in Cali, copper bullets required. I brought my 30-06.
I shot the ram a little behind its shoulder, and the ram didn't seem to really care. To make a long morbid story much shorter, it ended up taking numerous 30-06 shots and a then a pistol to finally kill that tough old ram.
Moral of the story based on my limited sample size?
Exact bullet placement matters more than exact width of bullet...but since no-one can be 100% perfect every time they pull the trigger, I now like the idea of using a semi-auto to hunt with so I can rapidly take follow up shots as needed.
The guide told me to drop the bullet right behind the pig's shoulder. I missed a little and the bullet blew out both shoulders.
Technically wasted some meat, but the pig dropped instantly except for some twitching on the ground.
More recently, I did a guided ram hunt in Cali, copper bullets required. I brought my 30-06.
I shot the ram a little behind its shoulder, and the ram didn't seem to really care. To make a long morbid story much shorter, it ended up taking numerous 30-06 shots and a then a pistol to finally kill that tough old ram.
Moral of the story based on my limited sample size?
Exact bullet placement matters more than exact width of bullet...but since no-one can be 100% perfect every time they pull the trigger, I now like the idea of using a semi-auto to hunt with so I can rapidly take follow up shots as needed.