I average 5,000-10,000 rounds a year shooting between 300-600 yards. A further 2,000-5,000 rounds from 600’ish to 1,200 yards. And usually 1,000- 2,000 rounds past 1,200 yards and out to 2,000’ish yards. All of those are in the field, off of a standard range in varied terrain and wind, tracking hit probabilities and wind calling ability. I purposely look for the worst conditions to shoot in- I live in a very windy, mountainous place and shoot in 30-60mph winds cross canyons near weekly.
With that, I will shoot an animal at any range that my “success” is high probability (95+%). Usually that is dictated by sufficient impact velocity to cause reliable bullet upset; wind and terrain conditions that are readable to within 2 mph if alone plus the capability to spot my own shots- terrain and ground behind the animal that helps/hinders bullet splash, or if I have a spotter- their skill at spotting shots/misses and their ability to quickly give corrections; the ability to locate and reach the impact spot and spot that the animal was last seen if it gets out of sight, tracking conditions (solid snow is much better than dry, rocky ground), fitness of myself and whoever I am with to track and find the animal in whatever terrain it may travel into/through, etc.
In other words it is not a simple nor hard distance. It cannot be. Well I suppose if one can only shoot to a certain range regularly- that should in all probability be their max range unless it is follow ups on a wounded animal.
I think it’s the most central discussion about shooting/killing animals that almost never gets discussed, and when it does it is way too superficial. My thoughts/experience based on shooting a lot, and killing and seeing killed a lot of animals by near any ones standards is that most are way too flippant about range and shooting animals. When people who are asking what bullet/rifle/scope they need or want and are talking about using it for shooting animals at 600, 800, 1000 yards (why is it always even numbers?) my eye starts twitching. When someone is writing that they are good to “x” distance, but when asked how many rounds they shoot in a year and it’s double or at most triple digit. Or how often they shoot to “x” range and it’s never, or a couple times a year… How do they believe that they are “good to” any range? It isn’t just the “confidence” to hit at “x” range, it’s the knowledge and skill to recover and correct quickly and precisely when you do miss or wound.
Where are the “how do I become effective at 800 yards” threads?