nksmfamjp
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2004
- Messages
- 3,504
So, when I was a young hunter, I was taught to shoot right at the rear crease of the front leg…..bottom half of the animal. My experience was this was generally effective, but if I shot too far into the rear, I always hit the stomach. Mind you, these were typically 100 to 300 yard shots.
Then, I got some info/family experience that told me to shoot center of the front shoulder. For several years, this was really effective, but I was generally shooting a 30-06 so it has the penetrating capability to get through this. It was still hard on bullets. I recovered a couple that were badly mangled.
Now I read about people shooting high shoulder and I wonder if there is a shot opportunity there or if I just need to continue shooting in the crease behind the front shoulder. I've gone back to shooting for the crease because it makes a good target and it is effective with pistol or rifle rounds. Much better with pistol rounds than trying to break down the shoulder complex. Remember a pistol round is gonna have about 600 foot pounds of energy compared to a rifle having 1500 to 2000 ftpounds of energy. Yes, energy is a very arguable subject, but energy is the potential that the bullet arrives at the animal with to open the bullet and do damage within the animal and it's the remaining energy that keeps propel it forward out the backside in my mind energy x bullet design x shot placement tells me if this thing is gonna exit or not.
So I go back to where should I be shooting them if we could curate these answers around a 6.5 Creedmoor at about 600 yards, that would be great. I think it 200 or 300 yards, I can just shoot it in the crease behind the shoulder and be just fine.
Then, I got some info/family experience that told me to shoot center of the front shoulder. For several years, this was really effective, but I was generally shooting a 30-06 so it has the penetrating capability to get through this. It was still hard on bullets. I recovered a couple that were badly mangled.
Now I read about people shooting high shoulder and I wonder if there is a shot opportunity there or if I just need to continue shooting in the crease behind the front shoulder. I've gone back to shooting for the crease because it makes a good target and it is effective with pistol or rifle rounds. Much better with pistol rounds than trying to break down the shoulder complex. Remember a pistol round is gonna have about 600 foot pounds of energy compared to a rifle having 1500 to 2000 ftpounds of energy. Yes, energy is a very arguable subject, but energy is the potential that the bullet arrives at the animal with to open the bullet and do damage within the animal and it's the remaining energy that keeps propel it forward out the backside in my mind energy x bullet design x shot placement tells me if this thing is gonna exit or not.
So I go back to where should I be shooting them if we could curate these answers around a 6.5 Creedmoor at about 600 yards, that would be great. I think it 200 or 300 yards, I can just shoot it in the crease behind the shoulder and be just fine.