406dn
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2019
- Messages
- 2,266
If this fella intends to hunt elk with his daughter in grizzly country, he could back her up with his bigger gun. That would definitely be sensible.
Killing an elk with 25-06 is doable but the margin for error is significantly tighter than for a larger 30 calibre cartridge. How experienced is she? If inexperienced, I would say go with something that hits a little harder with wider margin for error. Of course, dad will be there to clean up (and protect if necessary) but the objective is usually for our kids to take their own animals.
Really? So a young hunter, inexperienced and all needs to use a more powerful weapon than say an old man like me who has hunted for 50+ years?
How about just being a bit more discerning about taking a shot. That will easily cover the decreased margin of error. When my son killed his first elk, he weighed, at most 100 pounds. He used my .270 which I had reloaded some reduced charge loads for his use. The muzzle velocity for the 130 grain bullet was somewhere around 2700ft/sec. That killed his elk cleanly at 200 yards or so. Earlier I had made him pass on a chance at a very nice mule deer. The deer was too far away for his ability.
No one changes anyones mind on these things, but I've hunted elk in grizzly country every fall for forty years or so. All I have ever carried was that .270. It has not been the death of me yet, and the odds are quite good it won't be.