What is the accounting of shots that you carry 20+ cartridges on a hunt?
Just hunting, not culling, I have hunted and killed a lot and seen or been a participant in lots of rodeos. Almost always involving a wounded animal and trying to get it stopped. For example, two involving scopes catastrophically failing- in one case causing groups to be about 5 MOA, and another being about 12-15 MOA; one a very nervous hunter, and one a bedding problem with a rifle that caused random serious POI shifts based on how the rifle was held.
Both of those scope failing instances were only found after the first shot wounded the animal- there was no “if I can’t get it done with 5 rounds I shouldn’t be there” nonsense. In one case it took 14 rounds to kill the deer, in the other it was 10 or 11 rounds.
The instance with the nervous hunter was that he barely missed an elk with the first shot, the second the shot wounded it, and then he fired every round he had trying to kill it. 14 rounds, hitting it three times- twice in the hips, once in the stomach. Then, two of us hiked out and grabbed another rifle, while the hunter kept eyes on the elk, and then he killed it with the second rifle. The hunters rifle was a 300 PRC and his statement when asked if he had enough ammo when we left the truck was “I’m not gonna shoot 14 rounds”.
The rifle issue was caused by a stock fitting/bedding that depending on how the rifle was held or rested, caused the action to move and the barrel to have intermittent contact. The Hunter was a world class shooter, extremely capable with guns and killing, and needed up wounding the deer with the first shot, and firing 8 rounds (all that he had), and hit it 3 times trying to kill it. He ended up borrowing my rifle to finish it. His statement when we left the truck as to whether he had enough spare ammo was “man, I ain’t shooting 8 rounds at a deer!”
I carry just a few more rounds than I have ever needed in the field. I am generally using an AI mag- so 5 rounds in the gun and a spare 10 round in the bino pouch. Then, a 10 round ammo sleeve in the pack. If using a Tikka mag, it’s the small one in the rifle- 3 rounds, a spare 5 rounder in the bino pouch and a 3 rounder in a pocket, plus the 10 round sleeve/enough mags in the pack to make 10 rounds. I also carry an emergency round that never gets touched excepting emergencies. The mag in the rifle and a spare mag are mandatory, and the 10 rounds in the pack is for issues rezeroing, topping off a partially used mag, signaling in an emergency, or so someone I am with can use my rifle if theirs fails or runs out of ammo.