There's another way to look at this.
If we had a post topic discussing how many large game animals a person had pulled the trigger on, and how many were collected, and how many were lost, clean missed, wounded, Perhaps with some lessons learned for the benefit of others....
Would we have a good number of contributors? and would the responses be generally truthful?
I rather doubt both.
I also doubt that a professional guide would make a decision not to allow any certain ammo at the peril of his own business, without a halfway valid reason.
A friend of mine and I got the wild idea to use certain match bullets on deer some years ago, and by mid season we had both decided it was a real bad idea. I think that only took five or six perfect shots with a few bad results for us to figure it out. Years and years passed. A month ago he came over to use my range and it was like " OH you settled on game Kings too, huh?". After some years where the limit is 12 it's fairly easy to get somewhat relevant trends in performance.
You can handload your bullets backwards and kill a deer. That kind of doesn't make it smart though.
And I don't know whether Berger bullets are great or bad. I don't have a dog in the Berger dogfight. One thing I do know. If you frequently do a lot of tracking when you shoot deer, either you're shooting ain't great, your rifle ain't great, or your bullet performance ain't great. My friends and I have talked about this and about 80% of our deer are planted within a few paces of where they were hit. Don't know about elk. Don't know about moose. Don't know about bears. Deer? Yeah
If we had a post topic discussing how many large game animals a person had pulled the trigger on, and how many were collected, and how many were lost, clean missed, wounded, Perhaps with some lessons learned for the benefit of others....
Would we have a good number of contributors? and would the responses be generally truthful?
I rather doubt both.
I also doubt that a professional guide would make a decision not to allow any certain ammo at the peril of his own business, without a halfway valid reason.
A friend of mine and I got the wild idea to use certain match bullets on deer some years ago, and by mid season we had both decided it was a real bad idea. I think that only took five or six perfect shots with a few bad results for us to figure it out. Years and years passed. A month ago he came over to use my range and it was like " OH you settled on game Kings too, huh?". After some years where the limit is 12 it's fairly easy to get somewhat relevant trends in performance.
You can handload your bullets backwards and kill a deer. That kind of doesn't make it smart though.
And I don't know whether Berger bullets are great or bad. I don't have a dog in the Berger dogfight. One thing I do know. If you frequently do a lot of tracking when you shoot deer, either you're shooting ain't great, your rifle ain't great, or your bullet performance ain't great. My friends and I have talked about this and about 80% of our deer are planted within a few paces of where they were hit. Don't know about elk. Don't know about moose. Don't know about bears. Deer? Yeah