Two .270s and one .30-06 last year. All three hit the shoulders and all three wounded the bears. The bears were not recovered. That was last year. This year so far has been one .375 SOCOM. We also had a client, for some frankly inexplicable reason, try a head shot with a .30-06. He missed and hit the neck. Wounded and not recovered. We didn’t try tracking that one too hard because we were wore out from the last one (the .375 SOCOM one).
The problem is when you’re guiding or running an outfitting operation, you can’t make the shot for the client. We’ve tried everything. Caliber restrictions (not too big, not too small), bullet restrictions, making people shoot before they head to the stands, refusing to send people to the stands who clearly can’t shoot, etc.), putting the stands closer and so on. In the end, people take poor shots for a myriad of reasons. And when they do, I’m the dude who has to try and find the animal. If I had my way, the client list would be way shorter and limited to known shooters. But I’m not the boss, and if that was the case, the boss would be out of business.
Do I wish all hunters were like a lot folks here, constantly honing skills and equipment? Hell yeah. But they’re just not.