Amen to that!Keep shooting as long as he standing. Loos a small amount of meat or loose ALL of it if he runs off and unable to recover.
In the 15-20 seconds that you waited between shots I'd of lit him up like a Christmas tree.......
Amen to that!Keep shooting as long as he standing. Loos a small amount of meat or loose ALL of it if he runs off and unable to recover.
You've heard this from me before There is No Substitute For HP ️lol I just bought a 440 mopar to put in a Dodge Dakota ️Roadrunner2, Animals respond differently to bullet impact…..whether the shot is heard or not!
About 15 years ago, I shot a walking elk on the edge of timber, nearing dark, broadside, behind the shoulder, at about 30 yards.
At that range, he absorbed about 5100 ft/lbs energy, never flinched (that I could determine) only picked up his walking speed…..one of the reasons I don't buy into the energy fallacy!
As I was about to touch-off another shot, he collapsed!
I concur with the others….continue shooting until they ain't moving! You just don't know if that one shot was a clean miss, or a shot that will soon take him down, or a hit at which he may decide to rapidly leave the country! memtb
You must be hunting in Colorado, it has not happened to me, but I have seen the same thing twice. Remember in Co if you shoot any animal and it walks across the hill and someone else shoots it (no matter how good your shot was) it is the other persons animal.Well I haven't killed a ton of elk like most western folks here, but sadly lost a cow. The shot was broadside at 300 yards with a 185 Berger out of my trusty 300 wsm. I assumed she was dead on her feet and just standing there bleeding out. I could see her bleeding in the scope but as I approached she notice me and bounded 40 yards to a fence line separating properties. I heeded the rancher's warning not to cross any fences. He refused to contact the neighboring landowner, as disputes have happened with hunters not respecting the property lines. I sadly forfeited that elk to the critters and chewed my tag sandwich 27 hours home! Next time I'll pump one in the ceranium to anchor an elk on the spot. A lot different landowner relationships out there in them mountains than here but still deserving their due respect!
You did not make a mistake taking the second shot!! On my bull at 740 I saw the first go into the vitals and he staggered back quartering way be the second was on its way within 3 seconds and folded him where he stood. Shoot until they are on the ground. An elk can go miles on one lung or a liver wound. Loose the entire animal and sleep or loose a couple pounds of meat? Shoot the gun that's why you brought it.While recently hunting the grasslands of Montana, I took a large bull at 700 yrds (no apparent wind, 308 180gr). Now I have been reading here for years how animals properly shot at long ranges just don't react because the gunshot noise is so far away. I was on top of a very pointy grassy hill and the bull was on a ridgeline standing broadside with his head to the right and his right front leg forward as if about to take a step. When I fired all he did was lift up his right front leg and hold it up, so I know that I had made contact. Remembering what I had read here about animals not reacting, I waited for what was probably about 15-20 seconds (maybe more or maybe less-hard to tell in the excitement of the moment). The bull was with about 8-10 other bulls, and they slowly began to spook, so fearing that I might lose the animal I (mistakenly) took a second shot.
I found the bull about 100 yards away, and upon quartering it I discovered that both shots had entered the chest about 4-5 inches apart and lodged on the inside of the left shoulder (no exit wound) and caused massive damage to the muscle there.
The second shot was totally not needed and just added so much damage to the left shoulder meat that most of the meat there was ruined. Had I not fired the second shot I would have preserved a lot more meat.
My question to y'all is what do you do when you've just shot an animal at range, you know that you've hit it, and it's just standing there about to run off. Not wanting to wound an animal and cause needless suffering and have to track it for miles, do you take another shot and ensure a quick kill and possibly ruin a lot more meat, or do you just need to be patient? Your suggestions please...
I would think that if an animal is still on his feet, then whoever puts the shot in him that puts him down, owns the animal!You must be hunting in Colorado, it has not happened to me, but I have seen the same thing twice. Remember in Co if you shoot any animal and it walks across the hill and someone else shoots it (no matter how good your shot was) it is the other persons animal.
In any hunting situationI would think that if an animal is still on his feet, then whoever puts the shot in him that puts him down, owns the animal!
In any hunting situation
If someone shoots a deer elk or whatever and it is a killing shot and I shot it not knowing it had been shot, when the first shooter show up its his or hers and I'll help get it out. That gust me, everyone to their own.In any hunting situation
You're a gentleman. Not many of you left out there anymore.If someone shoots a deer elk or whatever and it is a killing shot and I shot it not knowing it had been shot, when the first shooter show up its his or hers and I'll help get it out. That gust me, everyone to their own.