Not if he uses the Schlitz Malt Liqour measureI hope he got her number,he obviously was trying to impress her with b.s.
I bet he also has a skewed version of what ten inches looks like
Matt
View attachment 1142759
Friends of mine are the exclusive outfitters on the Armendaris Ranch south of Albuquerque, New Mexico. They passed this photo on to me a few years ago. A retired police sniper came to the ranch with his 6.5-284 rifle and shot the oryx bull at about 700 yards. They saw dust from the hit, heard the whop too. Oryx ran off as if unhurt. The chase ensued for a couple miles and they were able to close the distance to a couple hundred yards. Hunter proceeds to shot 4 more shots and drops the bull. They walk up to it and see the bullet sticking out. They tried pulling it out with a pliers but it was mushroomed under the hide. It had hit a rib and expanded but didn't penetrate the rib bone. This was a 120 grain Barnes LRX type bullet. The energy the bullet was carrying at that distance was not enough to penetrate the bone.
They learned a lesson that day!
Scott
View attachment 1142759
Friends of mine are the exclusive outfitters on the Armendaris Ranch south of Albuquerque, New Mexico. They passed this photo on to me a few years ago. A retired police sniper came to the ranch with his 6.5-284 rifle and shot the oryx bull at about 700 yards. They saw dust from the hit, heard the whop too. Oryx ran off as if unhurt. The chase ensued for a couple miles and they were able to close the distance to a couple hundred yards. Hunter proceeds to shot 4 more shots and drops the bull. They walk up to it and see the bullet sticking out. They tried pulling it out with a pliers but it was mushroomed under the hide. It had hit a rib and expanded but didn't penetrate the rib bone. This was a 120 grain Barnes LRX type bullet. The energy the bullet was carrying at that distance was not enough to penetrate the bone.
They learned a lesson that day!
Scott
That looks like an expanded bullet travelled from the OTHER side, tumbled, and exited with the expanded petals retaining it in the hide. No way in hell did a Barnes not get past a rib, even at 700. And no, I’m not a huge fan of them, but have shot 1/2 dozen animals with them from hogs, deer, and two elk.
View attachment 1142759
Friends of mine are the exclusive outfitters on the Armendaris Ranch south of Albuquerque, New Mexico. They passed this photo on to me a few years ago. A retired police sniper came to the ranch with his 6.5-284 rifle and shot the oryx bull at about 700 yards. They saw dust from the hit, heard the whop too. Oryx ran off as if unhurt. The chase ensued for a couple miles and they were able to close the distance to a couple hundred yards. Hunter proceeds to shot 4 more shots and drops the bull. They walk up to it and see the bullet sticking out. They tried pulling it out with a pliers but it was mushroomed under the hide. It had hit a rib and expanded but didn't penetrate the rib bone. This was a 120 grain Barnes LRX type bullet. The energy the bullet was carrying at that distance was not enough to penetrate the bone.
They learned a lesson that day!
Scott
View attachment 1142759
Friends of mine are the exclusive outfitters on the Armendaris Ranch south of Albuquerque, New Mexico. They passed this photo on to me a few years ago. A retired police sniper came to the ranch with his 6.5-284 rifle and shot the oryx bull at about 700 yards. They saw dust from the hit, heard the whop too. Oryx ran off as if unhurt. The chase ensued for a couple miles and they were able to close the distance to a couple hundred yards. Hunter proceeds to shot 4 more shots and drops the bull. They walk up to it and see the bullet sticking out. They tried pulling it out with a pliers but it was mushroomed under the hide. It had hit a rib and expanded but didn't penetrate the rib bone. This was a 120 grain Barnes LRX type bullet. The energy the bullet was carrying at that distance was not enough to penetrate the bone.
They learned a lesson that day!
Scott
Light bullet, wind and yes, the bullet hit a rib.Looking at the hair, that bullet sticking out looks like it's an exit, not an entry wound. It's too far back to be a rib shot, so it would explain that it was well behind the vitals and the ensuing long chase. The tight group on the other four shots tells me the guy can shoot. I suspect that the story is true, except for the first shot hitting the rib.
Light bullet, wind and yes, the bullet hit a rib.
I wasn't there but my friend was the guide. He personally guides 100 hunters a year for oryx. And yes, the shooter definitely can shoot as attested by the killing shots group. The point of this post was the bullet didn't have enough energy to overcome the springiness of the rib bone.
Scott
This guy was chatting up a clerk at the store about using a .17 at 700 yards and that seemed like a stretch unless there's something else out there.
My friend has a .17 Rem that he used on coyotes many years ago but no more than 200 yards. Seems like too light a bullet to me. Who knows maybe he did, just didn't sound right to me. Not only that he was holding up the line! I was about to say something when he stopped talking and moved off and I could get my purchase done. Anyhoo just venting.