I would honestly like to hear you guys talk about bow hunting. The animal hears the shot and reacts to it before the projectile arrives. You often hold where you think your target will be and not where it is at the moment the shot breaks. Moving arrow moving target, what is your self imposed bow range limit, 15 or 20? Anything beyond that is unethical, right? Not to mention that you’re usually up a tree where the wind may or may not be the same. The real nail in the coffin of this debate is the real world data, more animals lost by a factor of five to ten. I watch enough bow hunting videos where shots are very long (70), to know that very very long shots are being taken.
The reality is that, with a few exceptions for crazy conditions, 600 yds is a chip shot with the tools available today. I helped a friend put together a rifle for an elk hunt. Guy is not an every week shooter. 155 scenar at 3400 fps out of a 300 WSM, rifle was sub MOA, lower tier rangefinder, $7 phone ballistics ap, and a $500 Vortex. 550yd perfect shot on a 5x5. No chance to get closer before the elk moved onto private land. He said the look of amazement and pride on his Dad’s face was worth three times what he had in the rifle.
The reality is that, with a few exceptions for crazy conditions, 600 yds is a chip shot with the tools available today. I helped a friend put together a rifle for an elk hunt. Guy is not an every week shooter. 155 scenar at 3400 fps out of a 300 WSM, rifle was sub MOA, lower tier rangefinder, $7 phone ballistics ap, and a $500 Vortex. 550yd perfect shot on a 5x5. No chance to get closer before the elk moved onto private land. He said the look of amazement and pride on his Dad’s face was worth three times what he had in the rifle.
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