This is a hunting forum though. Centered around hunting. I know plenty of individuals large, small, old and young that can shoot their large caliber rifle in a hunting situation (not a benchrest boat anchor) as accurate for 3-5 shots as any flavor Creedmoor. It's just a fact. In those situations, lots of guys prefer to leave their 22s at home. Certainly nobody has to subscribe to that just as if they don't have to subscribe to the fact that maybe you cannot shoot your 300 as well as they can so that must mean they cannot either.
In 2020 southpaw wrote the above and my reply is as follows:
I say that now, this is far from a hunting forum. While many followers are no doubt hunters, it seems as though most of the comments and post are about shooting paper at great distance with tiny bullets forming groups that would fit up a gnats butt. Or, we are regaled (thankfully only upon occasion) with stories of long, long, long shots on elk from one canyon wall to the opposite by a twelve year old using some new small miracle pill.
Relatively speaking, I see only a smattering of posts on successful hunting game at reasonably/doable distances. I will venture to guess that relatively few viewers/posters actually hunt and/or kill anything in the course of a hunting season and that's OK by me.
People complain about painful recoil. It's true if you shoot your 300 Win Mag off bags at the bench but not so much when focusing on a critter in the field. When I'm working up a load or setting up a new scope any of my magnum rifles, I shoot off of a "Leadsled" with 50-100 pounds of lead shot for ballast. I shoot 500-grain A-frames in my .458 and 300-grain TSX and/or A-Frames in my .375. I wear a "Past Pad" behind the sled and can shoot as many rounds as required with little if any discomfort (the recoil is spread over a longer time period as well). At the bench without the sled, the recoil is focused into your immobilized shoulder, standing or sitting in the field and away from the bench your entire body-mass moves back with the recoil.
In Africa I shoot both calibers standing either off-hand on close/quick shots or off of my special sticks on longer shots with no "felt" recoil. No "BS", when you are sighting on a Hippo or Cape Buffalo at close range and you jerk/pull/squeeze the trigger you (I don't anyway) feel the recoil or the hear the report (I do now wear hearing protection). (I'm going to Tanzania to hunt this September.)
Over the years I've posted several articles with photos on taking big/dangerous game in Africa and seen only a few others by site members so hence my assumption that there is little interest.
P.S. I've read over the years posts herein whereas the author has (typically) heard of other shooters suffering broken scopes or stocks while using "Leadsleds" to which I reply "Bull Squirt"! What you do learn is that when shooting big bangers you need to fully tighten the ring screws to keep the scope from lurching forward upon rifle recoil.
Regards
(old now) Duckklr