Mulligan
Silver $$ Contributor
As a long time elk hunter, I have tremendous respect for these magnificent animals and their ability to soa
My computer crashed so lets try this again. The elk deserves the utmost respect in that it is, as said above, a magnificent animal with an inordinate ability to soak up lead. An elk on a private ranch with no other hunters can be cleanly harvested with the 243 family of cartridges but an elk that has been stressed for months (bow, muzzleloader, hikers, 4-wheelers, etc.) on public land is a whole different animal. For that elk, I use a 300 Wby but any of the 7mmMags, 30-06, 300s will do a fine job. I understand your interest in switch barrels and think it might work. My respect for elk is such that I feel I must use a dedicated rifle with a quality scope (Leupold is my choice). My son joined me for our 2016 elk hunt on public land and we managed to find a nice bull which he hit 3 times at about 250 yds with a 260 using 140gr Nosler AccuBonds. All were good hits and went through the boiler room but the elk kept on going. As he was going through a saddle that dropped into a nasty canyon I decided I needed to help so I hit him with one 180gr in the 300 Wby. He went about 2 more yards and fell over dead. Could have been going down anyway but I do not like packing elk out of nasty canyons!
Bullet placement is still the best way to kill an elk but on pressured elk, I am an advocate of using enough gun as your shots are often less than ideal and on a moving target. Too many of these animals are wounded and escape to die later.
Just my 2 cents as an old, crusty elk hunter.
You are spot on in my opinion!