Typical shot distance

I shot my first antelope in Colorado in the early '70s when I still lived there. For the first 35 or so years that I lived in Montana I shot 1 or 2 here every year. Another year some friends and I each shot a buck in Wyoming.

All of my antelope hunting has been DIY on public or Block Management land.

Archery hunters kill antelope every year, and I have sat with my son and Golden retriever in sparse sage brush and had antelope graze close enough to us that I could hear them chewing.

I think that my farthest shot at an antelope was 351 yards.
 
Average of 200-300 yards. It is usually not difficult to get into the 200-300 yard range using terrain features. Getting inside of 200 yards they start to pick up movement more and it gets more difficult.

Recent kills:
220 yards
340 yards
150 yards
305 yards
120 yards

Have never needed to take a shot at more than 400 yards on antelope:
 
This year was my first time hunting antelope in Wyoming. Longest range I have good access to is 300 yards and its in a valley so there is no wind. My plan this year was to keep shots under 400 but wind was my main concern. Had multiple shot opportunities from 175 to 400ish. How close I could get depended on the terrain. Shot mine at 350 yards prone with bipod and no wind. Most days were 10ish mph and not bad but one day was more like 30-40 mph. I ran numbers for varying wind and range through a ballistic calculator before I went so had a idea how different wind speeds would affect drift. Also practiced multiple different shooting positions with bipod, tripod, and off of pack. The hunt was a lot of fun and meat is great!
 
My daughter’s antelope this year was at 335 yards and mine was at 146. Seemed to be “normal” shot distances for the terrain we hunt in.
 
Mine have varied from 70 yds to 676. I have taken more antelope with a muzzleloader than a rife and nearly all my ML bucks have been 120 yds and in. My wife has shot all of hers with a rifle from ranges of 110 to 430 yards.
 
I've shot 4. Three were with a bow, one with a rifle. The rifle was 100 yds free hand. Most of the time, as long as you're smart about it and not blowing them out by chasing them, you can get pretty close to antelope. If you can shoot out to 500 yards consistently, the sky's the limit. Just bear in mind though, they're a much smaller target than you might imagine.
 
Unless it's a very flat and open area, it's always surprised me how incredibly close to them you can get. Even using outside the box tactics, like in areas where they're used to vehicles, having friends drop you off and keep driving. Or just ignoring and pretending like you're not hunting them, they will sometimes not even mind you being too close. That being said, being proficient out to 500 should suffice in other situations.
 
Man I love antelope hunting. Terrain will dictate average shot distance, and terrain varies widely, so plan on being proficient from a variety of shooting positions.

The last antelope I killed was just over 100 yards in waist high grass. My buddy had a bog pod with him and that was a crucial piece of equipment to make the shot the buck was giving me. When he crested a rise he was at 250, which is too far for me off-hand, and the grass was to long to shoot prone or seated, but on that bog pod I could have dusted him at any point if he'd have stopped. Was standing at a low crouch.

If you're proficient out to 500, I'm assuming that's prone only. Getting proficient inside 300 from all sorts of funky positions will make you a more effective hunter for sure, especially in the sage, grass, brushy country speedy bois can end up in.
 
Usually, depending on terrain, closing to within 300 is very doable. The great thing about antelope is that, even if you blow a stalk and get busted, you'll usually get other opportunities. And that's an added bonus to hunting them... learning and honing your end game skills, which will apply to all game.

Good luck! You'll have a great time.
 
My 3 antelopes - 25 yards, 350 yards, 350 yards.

Antelope opportunities (would have shot but not the right tag) were mostly in the 150-250 yard bracket.

Practice at 300 yards. You can shoot 350 and anything under.
 
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