question for all members
#41

This is a very common occurrence in the profession, (every profession, in fact.)
Big game (as I've already said) and especially large-antlered big game do not stand still like paper targets. They are usually on the move, in bullet deflecting brush. Also, when you are hunting, you're never shooting off a bench, you're never sandbagged in, your heartbeat is never steady and calm, etc, etc, etc.
Bronc
Big game (as I've already said) and especially large-antlered big game do not stand still like paper targets. They are usually on the move, in bullet deflecting brush. Also, when you are hunting, you're never shooting off a bench, you're never sandbagged in, your heartbeat is never steady and calm, etc, etc, etc.
Bronc
-Jake
#42

I don't think I've seen/heard a SINGLE statement ("mishap") that couldn't of taken place to a less than proficient shooter at 100 yards.
Remember - Take the shot you know you can make, NOT the one you think you can make !!!
BTW - I "think" most of us on here know the difference between shooting paper and game animals ??
Remember - Take the shot you know you can make, NOT the one you think you can make !!!
BTW - I "think" most of us on here know the difference between shooting paper and game animals ??
Last edited by Sheridan; 11-22-2015 at 12:13 PM.
#43

1) Big game and especially large-antlered big game do not stand still like paper targets--they are usually on the move, in bullet deflecting timber or brush.
2) No. 1 above is Ridge Runners operational environment. That's the reality. It's just the way it is. It's not going to change. It's ALWAYS going to be that way.
3) Given his operational environment, the range at which Ridge Runner can successfully and ethically engage his quarry is reduced to about 200-yards.
4) Ridge Runner insists on shooting at deer at 800-1000 yards.
5) What is the product of this equation?
All of the above does not apply if Ridge Runner has a couple of corn feeders strategically placed at the edge of a field at LRF determined distances from a shooting bench (or his back porch) and "hunting" is defined by Ridge Runner as shooting does and 1.5 y.o. bucks at 800-1000 yards that are standing innocently under said feeders munching on corn.
Bronc
#44

Bronc,
Maybe you oughta READ some of RR's posts about how he takes his shots. Or maybe take a gander over to Longrangehunting.com and read up a little bit over there...there's much more to shooting and LR hunting then you'll learn from the Army marksmanship manual...
Maybe you oughta READ some of RR's posts about how he takes his shots. Or maybe take a gander over to Longrangehunting.com and read up a little bit over there...there's much more to shooting and LR hunting then you'll learn from the Army marksmanship manual...
#45

All of the above does not apply if Ridge Runner has a couple of corn feeders strategically placed at the edge of a field at LRF determined distances from a shooting bench (or his back porch) and "hunting" is defined by Ridge Runner as shooting does and 1.5 y.o. bucks at 800-1000 yards that are standing innocently under said feeders munching on corn.
Bronc






-Jake
#46

And "Lejeune," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine...e_Camp_Lejeune
Bronc
Last edited by Broncazonk; 11-22-2015 at 12:02 PM.
#47

And jeepkid, you need to Google, "Quantico." http://www.quantico.marines.mil/
And "Lejeune," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine...e_Camp_Lejeune
Bronc
And "Lejeune," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine...e_Camp_Lejeune
Bronc
Later.
#48

I don't think I've seen/heard a SINGLE statement ("mishap") that couldn't of taken place to a less than proficient shooter at 100 yards.
Remember - Take the shot you know you can make, NOT the one you think you can make !!!
BTW - I "think" most of us on here know the difference between shooting paper and game animals ??
Remember - Take the shot you know you can make, NOT the one you think you can make !!!
BTW - I "think" most of us on here know the difference between shooting paper and game animals ??
Last edited by Champlain Islander; 11-22-2015 at 12:30 PM.
#49



I couldn't care less...it's always the same argument...military knows everything about shooting and civilians know nothing...Have fun shooting your taxpayer bought rebarrelled Sendero, we shall continue doing what we do also, except with better equipment and more skill.
Later.
Later.
#50

IMO if you can figure out a way to reliably kill them dead, you are good to go. Just putting a bullet in them isn't actually the task, putting them down is.
I shot a really old Doe awhile back. She was really sneaky. I'd hunted this large lease for years and had never seen her before and she was right in the middle of a 3200 acre lease.
She was obviously on her last legs, she was skin and bones. I put her down, just so she wouldn't get sick and possibly spread it around.
I found a bullet lodged in her lower jaw, it had been in there for a long time. It was abscessed and the bone was dissolving. Stuff like this just makes me sad.
The military taught me to put a round in a man sized target at 500 yards. I taught myself how to put it in their ear.
All you guys are just novices anyway, we used to chop off 2X4's at 1200 meters just to get sighted in. Tankers have bigger guns.
I shot a really old Doe awhile back. She was really sneaky. I'd hunted this large lease for years and had never seen her before and she was right in the middle of a 3200 acre lease.
She was obviously on her last legs, she was skin and bones. I put her down, just so she wouldn't get sick and possibly spread it around.
I found a bullet lodged in her lower jaw, it had been in there for a long time. It was abscessed and the bone was dissolving. Stuff like this just makes me sad.
The military taught me to put a round in a man sized target at 500 yards. I taught myself how to put it in their ear.

All you guys are just novices anyway, we used to chop off 2X4's at 1200 meters just to get sighted in. Tankers have bigger guns.
