There are many levels of shooter, equipment, and knowledge and experience.
Be ethical and do your homework. I have shot many deer at 900-1000 yards with a rifle and bullet suited for doing this.
I have shot 100s of deer at at ranges from 30-300 yards.
A great gun writer Bob Hagel once wrote, "there is no such thing as shooting to much gun, dead is dead."
I think there is an equally important statement, you can't be a too experienced shooter.
If you are going to hunt at extreme distances, practice with what you are going to shoot.
You can't rely on what someone else says.
Sit down an shoot your rifle and loads from 50 yards to your desired distance. After reaching 300 yards you need to practice at 25 yard intervals. Keep a log of your scope settings. Because your vertical changes more rapidly and your velocity drops off.
There are accurate rifles and there are flat shooting accurate rifles.
They are not always the same. Generally flat shooting rifles have more recoil and muzzle blast.
With the general shooting population there is an inverse relationship between flat shooting rifles and accurate rifle shooters. The General population can not shoot a flat shooting rifle as accurately as an accurate rifle. Example the average guy can't shoot a 7mmSTW or 300 Ultra Mag as well as he can shoot a .243 or 308 Winchester.
Shot placement and bullet performance are more important than flat trajectory.
Shot placement comes from knowing your distance and your equipment, confidence and a little luck.
Shooting a 2-3" group with .243 or 308 at 600 yards is much easier than shooting the same group with a large magnum.
Again practice practice and practice some more.
After you get your equipment issues resolved you will have to learn to read the wind. There is no better teacher than shooting F-Class or Long Range Bench Rest or Tactical rifle.
If you don't have time to shoot your rifle a couple hundred rounds every year you should not shoot game at ranges at over 300 yards.
I personally shoot tens of thousands of rounds every year. At known distance I can hold my own. At unknown distances I consider myself to a novice with 45 years shooting experience.
Get yourself a good range finder and go practice with your rifle.
Be a responsable shooter and remember you represent all of the shooting community out in the public.
Nat Lambeth
Be ethical and do your homework. I have shot many deer at 900-1000 yards with a rifle and bullet suited for doing this.
I have shot 100s of deer at at ranges from 30-300 yards.
A great gun writer Bob Hagel once wrote, "there is no such thing as shooting to much gun, dead is dead."
I think there is an equally important statement, you can't be a too experienced shooter.
If you are going to hunt at extreme distances, practice with what you are going to shoot.
You can't rely on what someone else says.
Sit down an shoot your rifle and loads from 50 yards to your desired distance. After reaching 300 yards you need to practice at 25 yard intervals. Keep a log of your scope settings. Because your vertical changes more rapidly and your velocity drops off.
There are accurate rifles and there are flat shooting accurate rifles.
They are not always the same. Generally flat shooting rifles have more recoil and muzzle blast.
With the general shooting population there is an inverse relationship between flat shooting rifles and accurate rifle shooters. The General population can not shoot a flat shooting rifle as accurately as an accurate rifle. Example the average guy can't shoot a 7mmSTW or 300 Ultra Mag as well as he can shoot a .243 or 308 Winchester.
Shot placement and bullet performance are more important than flat trajectory.
Shot placement comes from knowing your distance and your equipment, confidence and a little luck.
Shooting a 2-3" group with .243 or 308 at 600 yards is much easier than shooting the same group with a large magnum.
Again practice practice and practice some more.
After you get your equipment issues resolved you will have to learn to read the wind. There is no better teacher than shooting F-Class or Long Range Bench Rest or Tactical rifle.
If you don't have time to shoot your rifle a couple hundred rounds every year you should not shoot game at ranges at over 300 yards.
I personally shoot tens of thousands of rounds every year. At known distance I can hold my own. At unknown distances I consider myself to a novice with 45 years shooting experience.
Get yourself a good range finder and go practice with your rifle.
Be a responsable shooter and remember you represent all of the shooting community out in the public.
Nat Lambeth