Do we have to be successful????You are welcome to come out to NW Wyoming next fall and show me exactly how you plan on closing the distance or finding later a migrating mule deer.
I’d give a try.
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Do we have to be successful????You are welcome to come out to NW Wyoming next fall and show me exactly how you plan on closing the distance or finding later a migrating mule deer.
Got any points?Do we have to be successful????
I’d give a try.![]()
I feel like I might have walked into something here.
Jfc?
I wish you only the best man.




No points. No experience.Got any points?
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You should start buying points out west somewhere brother.No points. No experience.
And I’m not knocking your program.
Just giving you a hard time.![]()
………20 years ago.You should start buying points out west somewhere brother.
Its clear that your clueless. The mule deer "herd" that I am hunting likely traveled 50 to 100 miles to walk past me. They dont live where I am hunting them, they are passing through. In the drainage I posted a picture of there are between 50 and 100 centuries old migration trails covering a drainage that is thousands of yards wide. Deer migrate heavily on all of them. Come on over and "narrow down" which trail a migrating deer is going to show up on buddy.
You seem to open your mouth alot with a ton of undue arrogance and condacendence. Try being humble sometime, people might like you.
Its clear that your clueless.

I triple dog dare you!I’m going to shoot past 300 yards so much harder this year now.
You could also get proficient at understanding how mule deer use their habitat and, more specifically, how the herd you're hunting uses it, but then, you'd know how silly this statement is:
Do you think your mule deer that use the ground in your photo are somehow special compared to the mule deer that use the ground contained in mine?
"There is no catching up to them" when you have no idea how the herd you're hunting uses its range, perhaps.
That's not the case when you know where they came from when you saw them and have some informed opinion over where they're headed.
I've been hunting for 54 years now, having the opportunity in my life to cull loads of aoudad and whitetails. I've killed at least 400 head of big game not including hogs. I can count on two hands the number of them that were over 350 yards. All this in W TX, SE NM, TX and OK Panhandles.My whole life I’ve maybe shot 5 animas past 300yds.
Completely agree. I want to be proficient to 600 yards, even if my opportunities at that range are uncommon.
Agreed, but the problem is that influencer culture has glorified and normalized long range hunting so much that a lot of the new post-COVID hunters seem to think they're scrubs if they don't plan on shooting half a mile.
I was an active duty precision shooting instructor for a few years. One of the first days of our COI, we'd take guys out to zero and build their DOPE card. Then, we'd shoot a few known distance silhouettes out to 700 or so. Most of these guys were shooters and feeling pretty good at this point. Then, we'd run a HIIT style circuit workout, get the heart rate over 150 for a few minutes. Same guys would get back on the line for unknown distance targets and ten seconds per round. Same rifles, ammo, optics, same dudes... VERY different result.
My big qualm here is that the influencer types seem to have convinced thousands of hunters that it's good to go to shoot at live animals at 5, 6 or 700 yards just because they have practiced that distance one or twice from a prone position on a stationary target at known distance with a resting heart rate on a manicured shooting range. Here to tell anyone who will listen that this is false.
I still practice further than I’d shoot at game because it’s good for skills, but it’s pretty much just an added tool should an unexpected rodeo occur.
You can practice 'til the cows come home, but if you're shooting in any inconsistent wind situation, first round cold bore hits are "iffy" at best. I've watched Hodnett's bunch shoot many, many times and they don't make first round hits every time either. Nobody does, especially internet heroes.All day long. Just wish it were easy to see how often all these insta hunters who have no distance shooting background miss when trying to look cool taking a 500 yard shot to brag about in the caption of their post. I'd bet the farm there are thousands of animals wounded and unrecovered out west every year because of this trend.
The cold bore challenge is a great data set for this. First round hits are iffy past 400 yards from field positions for most shooters. And I'd wager that anyone who posts in that thread shoots way more than the average hunter.You can practice 'til the cows come home, but if you're shooting in any inconsistent wind situation, first round cold bore hits are "iffy" at best. I've watched Hodnett's bunch shoot many, many times and they don't make first round hits every time either. Nobody does, especially internet heroes.