sneakem
Well-known member
No elk ever takes a bullet through both lungs and walks away to see another day... no matter the caliber...
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Probably, some caliber don’t handle monolith very well @ 300+ meters, or don’t down size to compensate for them IMOSlow bullet velocity? mtmuley
Yeah but do you really want it to take 10 minutes to die? Or even 5? Most of the country I hunt is open but there’s lots of country where an elk can easily disappear in some tall thick cover. And with little blood to trail, that can lose you an animal. That’s my point. Of course it will die!No elk ever takes a bullet through both lungs and walks away to see another day... no matter the caliber...
Slow deathSlow bullet velocity? mtmuley
Does anyone have real world evidence of a double-lunged elk taking 10 minutes to die and not leaving a blood trail?Yeah but do you really want it to take 10 minutes to die? Or even 5? Most of the country I hunt is open but there’s lots of country where an elk can easily disappear in some tall thick cover. And with little blood to trail, that can lose you an animal. That’s my point. Of course it will die!
Not a elk they are thin skinEd, nilgai antelope yesDoes anyone have real world evidence of a double-lunged elk taking 10 minutes to die and not leaving a blood trail?
I’ve heard this one a few times, but it’s usually a story from a sister’s cousin’s boyfriend or something like that.
As an archery hunter I’ve grown weary of the stories of “perfectly” hit deer that got away because of xyz broadheads not working. If and when those deer are recovered, they are NEVER hit perfectly. I wonder if the majority of “bullet failure” stories are more inline with shooter failure.
Put it where it counts, they rarely leave sight distance... Many times I've trailed animals with little to no blood with poorly placed shots from heavy recoiling magnums. My point is use a gun that you can comfortably shoot well and take an ethical well placed shot.Yeah but do you really want it to take 10 minutes to die? Or even 5? Most of the country I hunt is open but there’s lots of country where an elk can easily disappear in some tall thick cover. And with little blood to trail, that can lose you an animal. That’s my point. Of course it will die!
I only am sharing from my own experience, otherwise I wouldn’t share at all. But maybe it’s not worth much since I don’t live in Wyoming and kill 2-3 elk every year. Oh wait yes I do.Does anyone have real world evidence of a double-lunged elk taking 10 minutes to die and not leaving a blood trail?
I’ve heard this one a few times, but it’s usually a story from a sister’s cousin’s boyfriend or something like that.
As an archery hunter I’ve grown weary of the stories of “perfectly” hit deer that got away because of xyz broadheads not working. If and when those deer are recovered, they are NEVER hit perfectly. I wonder if the majority of “bullet failure” stories are more inline with shooter failure.
I’m with you. I hunt really rugged country. At the very least they’ll run off a ridge and die in some nasty hole creating a bunch of extra work. I once watched my friend shoot a cow at 20 yards. We followed red blood spray in the snow coming out of the offside lung for maybe 5 miles. We kept thinking it’d be dead over the next hill, behind the next sagebrush. Ended up pushing it onto property we couldn’t get on and never got that elk. Surely it died eventually. I mostly take high shoulder shots, dead right there.Yeah but do you really want it to take 10 minutes to die? Or even 5? Most of the country I hunt is open but there’s lots of country where an elk can easily disappear in some tall thick cover. And with little blood to trail, that can lose you an animal. That’s my point. Of course it will die!