This comment here only furthers the divide between long range hunters and traditional sportsman. There are those who have the ability to make the long shots and do so only as a last resort and then there are those who have the same abilities and choose to take the long shots as their first option so they can brag about how good of a marksman they are.Those who can, do. Those who can't, complain.
so 1000 yards takes NO skill.. yet you need a "decent" rifle and a spring/summers worth of practice... but then its cake? so if thats the case what is the issue with long range hunting? I am not being cynical I am just trying to understand the mindset. To me bow hunting is the riskiest type of hunting out there.. yes you have to sneak up on the animal or call it in.. but look at all the variables in such a short distance like obsticals, bone, wind, the animal jumping the string etc... where as with a gun you still have obsticals and other variables like wind but a bullet has the ability to break bone and disable the animal. it also has hydrolic shock. Your lethal kill zone is much bigger.Nothing wrong with a limit of 200 or 300 yards but a shot of that distance certainly doesn't take any skill with a decent rifle and a spring-summer of range time. Separating the hunt from the shot, it's a lot tougher to get close than it is to shoot them.
Amen to that.Mine was the one running and to be honest I feel more comfortable taking my time and shooting one at 600-800yds than one free handed and on the run at over 150 that's mixed in with other deer.
I don't want to ruffle anyones feathers, were all there for one underlying theme, spend time in the outdoors, enjoy time with friends and family and hopefully be successful at harvesting an animal. The long range world isn't going away anytime soon and I don't totally agree with all the stuff they are putting out there. I don't know of many people that can put 1st round cold bore hits on a 36"x36" steel plate @ 1200 plus yards. The variables that come into play at distances past 800-900 yards take a ton of knowledge and precision to predict.Well said woodtick!
Still the same concept and I'm not trying to argue!Archery is a whole 'nother ballgame as everything is happening subsonic.
Did you read anywhere where I said a 1000 yard shot takes no skill or where I said I had a problem with LRH? I shot one of my antelope this year at 500.
This is what I said:
"Nothing wrong with a limit of 200 or 300 yards but a shot of that distance certainly doesn't take any skill with a decent rifle and a spring-summer of range time."
Perhaps the wrong choice of words.
To paraphrase, a 300 yard shot is cake for anybody that spends several months at the range and is using a decent rifle. Decent being moa or better.
When shooting that decent rifle, I still say it's tougher to get within 300 yards of the critter than it is to kill it. 1000 or even 700 is a different story but you've shot enough to know you can kill any animal you want at 200-300 yards if you can get that close.