TaperPin
WKR
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2023
- Messages
- 3,265
You did a good job of summarizing it. Meat animals are easy to find and easy enough to wait until an easy shot presents itself. When it’s an animal that has taken many years to find, then yes, I’d like as large a cartridge as I can shoot. To many of us, that’s common sense.Respectfully, I don't think anyone questioned your cartridge choices, just your justifications for why you need what you need. You seem to be shifting goalposts and pretending the conversation is about what you shoot, while it's really about shots you propose should be taken, which (you claim) work better when taken with larger, magnum cartridges. A short review:
"I don’t see a lot of talk about less than ideal angles - as if deer and elk stand sideways looking pretty just waiting to be shot. In my world, both are quick to hightail it out of the country, over a saddle or over a ridge. I think it’s a good noble sign that small caliber folks claim to happily let an animal go that’s a hard quartering or going away shot. Lightly constructed bullets just aren’t cutout for this. It doesn’t seem like a minor compromise to let an animal go that would be easy to anchor with a larger tougher bullet.
There’s nothing wrong with broadside shots with lightly constructed bullets from small calibers and I wouldn’t hesitate to take a shot with 77 gr TMK, I’ll continue to loan out a 243, and will probably take something with the new 6BR barrel. However, when I’m spending years to find a big animal, the more angles I can shoot it from the better, and a heavy/fast controlled expansion bullet has been a reliable killer since the preteen days reading Mad Magazine at the grocery store. For 95% of all shots I expect the bullet to barely expends any energy on the pass through, because on that difficult going away 5% shot it needs all the penetration and horsepower it can get."
Short translation: "I like magnum rifles because if it's a big, trophy animal, I'll shoot it right in the ass, if that's all I've got, rather than let if go. I find magnum cartridges work better for this."
"Maybe I just need different friends to hunt with, but nobody I know is interested in slow poke cartridges because of what their experiences have been. When the deer are running over the ridge I’d love to have a buddy smack one with a Creedmoor - there’s nothing special about what would happen, but I’m always open to watching this Creedmoor magic."
Short translation: "If deer are running away, we shoot them in the ass. That little Creedmoor ain't gonna work as good as my 300WM to shoot deer in the ass"
"I must not be the right person to explain how people around me behave. For does, meat bucks or cows we shoot them with whatever and avoid hard angled shots, but when it comes to what might be a once in a lifetime animal it makes sense to us to use something with deeper penetration for those hard angled shots. A Creedmoor, 25-06, 270, or even a 243 are all popular meat hunting guns - we see what they do every year, year after year, family after family. There isn’t any mystery to it - it’s not some hidden secret."
Short translation: "If it's a meat animal, yes, we show restraint and take high percentage shots, but if it’s a trophy bull, we take any shot we have and use magnum rifle because we find they work more reliably with low percentage shots"
I think this is what the conversation is about. Essentially you've been arguing that smaller cartridges are fine for shots typically taken by hunters, but magnums are better when it comes to ass shooting animals. That's fine, and I doubt anyone seriously doubts your premise, just your use of that as a consideration, especially for a new hunter, to factor into their rifle selection.