459 Yard Buck - and the founding of LRH.com

Ha. Your story reminds me of the whitetail I killed in fall of 1997 in South Dakota with the lowly .30-06 from a sitting position using a fence corner post as a rest. There was another hunter who was on the property for the first time that year and he wanted to sit in the same corner I did. He was an older fellow (I was a senior in high school - 40 seemed old, though I think he was in his 60s.) and I offered to help him get a deer back to the farmyard if he had a shot at one. A nice 4x4 showed up in the pasture southeast of us. I didn't have a rangefinder at the time, but I had been shooting flickertails in that pasture all summer long with a .22 LR and a .243 Win with 55 gr. Ballistic Tips and knew he was about 425-450 yards out. The older guy was shooting a .300 Win Mag. I asked him if he wanted to take the shot and told him my range estimate. "No. That's too far. That buck is over 500 yards away." "Nah, he isn't that far. If you don't shoot him, I'm going to." He laughed at me and said, "Good luck". I settled in, shooting a 165 gr. Nosler BT over 57 gr. of IMR 4350, sighted in 3" high at 100 and dead on at 250 yards. I put the horizontal crosshair just to where I could see a sliver of light above his back and squeezed off. We both clearly heard the bullet impact and the old guy said, sotto voce "Holy crap". The buck had turned 180 degrees, presenting a broadside shot again. I sent another bullet down, but it was unnecessary. We heard the impact from that bullet also and the buck's hindquarters slowly sank down and he was done. The older fellow said, "If I hadn't seen it with my own eyes I wouldn't believe it." I paced off the shot - 427 yards to the deer. It was my longest kill on a deer at the time and made me realize that 400 yard shots weren't impossible. I'd just done it twice. The impact wound from the second shot was less than two inches from the exit wound of the first shot. Longest kill on a critter at the time was a paced 642 yards on a prairie dog with my .243 Winchester and the 55 gr. Nosler BTs.
 
This is a thread for discussion of the article, 459 Yard Buck By Len Backus. Here you can ask questions or make comments about the article.
.

That was a long time ago, been with you for most of it!! Off and on anyway. Longrangehunting.com certainly was a big part to help me build my business 20 years ago!!
 
This is a thread for discussion of the article, 459 Yard Buck By Len Backus. Here you can ask questions or make comments about the article.
.

Thanks Len, for the LongRangeHunting website. We would have been crucified as well back in the 90s as we were shooting Coues deer at extended ranges, 300-500 yards. We would practice at the Tucson Rifle Club out off Ajo Highway near Three Points. They had/have a 500-meter steel setup that allowed us to verify our groups and drop data. Sometime between 1995 and 2000 I bought a Bushnell Elite 1500 Yardage Pro Laser Rangefinder. It wasn't very good, but it did the job when combined with our data.
 
Some great stories, in the article and in the thread. Living in the West, I don't think a 459 yard shot is considered exceptionally long today (it is certainly longer for some than others, depending on shooting ability). I will say that hunting has changed as our tools have evolved; even in the late 1990s a sub-MOA rifle was considered a rare and valuable thing, certainly not something you could count on off the shelf. The BOSS was revolutionary, and accurate commercial ammo is a thing (although Federal Premium ammo always shot well out of my tuned hunting rifles back in the 1990s... under 1 MOA).

I can see both sides, but if you keep doing what you always do, you keep getting what you always get. It took someone to push the envelope, to prove that it could be done, regularly and repeatedly. It took having the tools available and affordable (I bought an ex-USSR laser rangefinder with 20 KM range back then... it was EXPENSIVE). It took inexpensive chronographs, good ballistics programs, accessories like lightweight but steady bipods... all things that often were produced before the demand was there. Weatherby rifles were famous for their 1.5" 100-yard group guarantee; today no one would be happy if the best their rifle could shoot was 1.5" groups.

My experience has been that hunting pressure in the West is heavier than ever as more people have more money to pursue their dreams. Long distance shooting at big game is a lot more common, and hunters understand and accept this, and prepare themselves for it. This is true in the East as well, as exemplified by the rise of beanfield rifles and the disappearance of the trusted .30-30 lever action as a proper deer rifle and a good choice for eastern whitetail hunters.

I'm glad to have stumbled across this site. Lots of good information. Cheers!
 
Top