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....steamingHad to fight through them just to see if it was as stupid as every other "article" the Daily Mail has ever written.
Here, here, I second that. Let this be done.I believe We have moved on and the topic is now small mans syndrome I think the caliber topic was finalized with no one gaf what someone else shoots if they are ethically taking animals with it
pfft this is a record setting thread, need to get to 100,000 views and 10,000 responses. Of course if it gets to out of hand I imagine @Big Fin will lock it up.Here, here, I second that. Let this be done.
Actually, I made that mistake once… and I used enough gun. 45/70 releases a lot of skunk stink. Ask me how I knowLets face it.
I don't care if your carrying a .17, or a 20mm Vulcan...
When a skunk is on the trail ahead of you, your going the other way...
AmenI’ve used 30-06 and .270 a ton for elk. I’ve seen absolutely no difference in performance between the two. Shoot them in the lungs at under 100 yards; they go 50 yards and tip over
When I jump in with that pig, he won't know which ways up, when mud is coming from his ears.
Convinced me!Really...funny how I hear about this, then the reality of what I actually personally witness.
Poor/non-existent blood trails? Not in my experience, but have "only" been shooting a 6mm/.243 for 40+ years.
My nephews cow elk, one shot with a .243 and 100 grain solid base, 360ish yards. Only shot he's ever taken at an elk.
Non-existent blood trail? Not on this elk it wasn't...took the picture about 3-4 steps from where he hit it:
Shot this cow with my 6mm year before last, 110 yards with a 95 grain nosler ballistic tip...
IIRC, I've shot about a half dozen elk with a .243/6mm and never have had a bad deal...I'd have to review my notes, but I've shot a couple semi-trucks full of pronghorn and deer with them. Also shot one black bear and a bighorn sheep with it. Can't recall not having good blood trails. I did lose one deer with a 6mm, made a horrible choice shooting at a moving whitetail, offhand at about 120 yards. Hit it very low through the brisket on the near side, busted the off shoulder near the body. That's what happens when you shoot animals on the "edges"...and it would have been the same outcome no matter if I would have shot it there with my .338.
The .243/6mm is a great deer and pronghorn round...and I'm not one bit scared to shoot elk with them either, BTDT.
In thick timber for Elk, I'll be using my 45-70.And you forgot: no bloodshot mess when you skin that deer shot with a 45-70. Won't get the same result with a .243! 45-70 isn't a long range calibre but getting up close and personal is real hunting. Good choice. What's not to like?