arizona jim
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- Nov 19, 2001
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It may seem a bit controversial but I like to break a shoulder when shooting elk to help anchor the animal in its tracks. Ever since my first elk hunt when I shot an elk at dusk & it did not fall down I have changed my mind on the best spot to aim. It was a young cow & it just stood there upon the first shot. Then it put it head down as to feed again.
I could not believe it, I was just 40yds away; I quickly checked my scope then loaded another round. At the second shot the elk shook then took about ten steps in disbelief I loaded another round. Just before I shot, it stumbled but would not fall. I was nervous because if it bolted to run it would be over the hill & I would be looking for it all night.
The elk finally fell, and when I checked the entrance and exit wounds they were only an inch apart. Both hit heart & lung. The exit holes were about 1" in diameter & pieces of heart, lung & ribs were all over the ground. I was using Winchester 180grn. Fail Safes in 30-06. On the same hunt I saw my dad put 4 shots with 220grn. bullets into an elkat 90yds before it went down.
Since then, and after talking to more experienced elk hunters; I have started to include a shoulder & the vitals in my shots. (Far shoulder on longer shots & near shoulder on close shots.) My next two elk were 1 shot kills. A large mature cow at 300 yards & a 5x6 Bull at 50 yds. I was using the same rifle & bullet combo. Both had visable impacts & they could not support their own weight on the broken shoulder. They went down quickly.
Some people say it wastes meat & others say it risks a chance of just wounding it. I feel if you use the right bullet and know your rifles limitations that it is a good shot. What do you guys / girls think??
I could not believe it, I was just 40yds away; I quickly checked my scope then loaded another round. At the second shot the elk shook then took about ten steps in disbelief I loaded another round. Just before I shot, it stumbled but would not fall. I was nervous because if it bolted to run it would be over the hill & I would be looking for it all night.
The elk finally fell, and when I checked the entrance and exit wounds they were only an inch apart. Both hit heart & lung. The exit holes were about 1" in diameter & pieces of heart, lung & ribs were all over the ground. I was using Winchester 180grn. Fail Safes in 30-06. On the same hunt I saw my dad put 4 shots with 220grn. bullets into an elkat 90yds before it went down.
Since then, and after talking to more experienced elk hunters; I have started to include a shoulder & the vitals in my shots. (Far shoulder on longer shots & near shoulder on close shots.) My next two elk were 1 shot kills. A large mature cow at 300 yards & a 5x6 Bull at 50 yds. I was using the same rifle & bullet combo. Both had visable impacts & they could not support their own weight on the broken shoulder. They went down quickly.
Some people say it wastes meat & others say it risks a chance of just wounding it. I feel if you use the right bullet and know your rifles limitations that it is a good shot. What do you guys / girls think??