Elk Question

Ryan Avery

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I was just listening to a podcast were the host described a quartering towards shot where you have to penetrate 8” to 12” of muscle before entering the chest cavity. Can anyone put logic to this? Best I can come up with is 5” tops?? Maybe he’s killing different elk then me.
 
Is he putting it through the brisket, or the front edge of the front shoulder? Either way, I don’t see it being anywhere near 12”.
 
I was just listening to a podcast were the host described a quartering towards shot where you have to penetrate 8” to 12” of muscle before entering the chest cavity. Can anyone put logic to this? Best I can come up with is 5” tops?? Maybe he’s killing different elk then me.

Neck shot ?


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I can see 8"-12" of penetration needed on a Quartering to you shot, not hard to imagine. Where a broadside shot may be 1/2 to 1/3 of that. Just about any shot would require more penetration to get to the intended vitals when quartering to you or away from you.

ElkNut
 
Agree with Elk Nut and cnelk, it depends on the angle and I would guess 8" is possible and maybe more. Especially if you add muscle, bone and hide to the mix and aim for top of the heart. Penetration is most important when bones and angled ribs are protecting the forward chest area.
 

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Im not talking about total penetration or hide or bone. I’m asking where you would have to go through 8-12” of muscle.
 
I can't say that I have ever seen an elk with "8"-12" of meat" before/after the shoulder in a 45* quartering too shot. If you count hide, bone (as in point of shoulder) meat/muscle, then maybe you could get to 8" on a very large elk but I just don't see how you could reach that 12" mark.

Must be the elk that I have shot or seen shot in Idaho, Utah, Wyoming and Montana were all way undersized compared to the elk that the podcaster is shooting.
 
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Depending on where your entry is, i would say 12” could be a worst case scenario. I did not listen to the podcast but I would think he meant “tissue” not just specifically muscle.


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I've seen elk like that before . They can all bench 350lbs . Wonder if you could get 12 inches out of a front shoulder on a cornfed black angus steer . Maybe
 
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