So are you a fan of the 338?
Maybe the weather had an effect, starting to get cooler down here, regardless congratsKind of. We watched bulls in this area the day before…but didn’t go in. Tonight we glassed up a lot more elk than the day before so we went in.
The ol 6.5 do the same thing =)I love it!! However it completely destroyed her shoulder, liquified her lungs and she still went 50 yards. Elk are tough
I don't think elk are that tough just a bigger biomass that takes a bit longer to wind down. All the elk I have seen escape suffered from bad shot placement. The first elk I shot was with a 338 Win mag using 210 Barnes at a long ways, after that I have used a few different things mostly a 7 mag but stepped down to a 25-06 once. I have had the privelidge to watch and particpate in the down fall of several dozen over the years with many different smaller calibers down to .260 Rem and have been told tales of a .243 dumping them from reliable sources. The thing I have walked away with is steep angle shots introduce a different challenge but not much if you hit vitals (penetration) . If the elk (cow or bull is hit broadside in the 12" target of the heart and lung area they die pretty quick with just about any reasonable centerfire round . All of this is concluded with the comment that none of what I have seen was at exteme distances ( beyond 500 yards).I love it!! However it completely destroyed her shoulder, liquified her lungs and she still went 50 yards. Elk are tough
I don't think elk are that tough just a bigger biomass that takes a bit longer to wind down. All the elk I have seen escape suffered from bad shot placement. The first elk I shot was with a 338 Win mag using 210 Barnes at a long ways, after that I have used a few different things mostly a 7 mag but stepped down to a 25-06 once. I have had the privelidge to watch and particpate in the down fall of several dozen over the years with many different smaller calibers down to .260 Rem and have been told tales of a .243 dumping them from reliable sources. The thing I have walked away with is steep angle shots introduce a different challenge but not much if you hit vitals (penetration) . If the elk (cow or bull is hit broadside in the 12" target of the heart and lung area they die pretty quick with just about any reasonable centerfire round . All of this is concluded with the comment that none of what I have seen was at exteme distances ( beyond 500 yards).
@Jake done fib either, you gave her the hatchet special via Texas heart shot !
Jesus Christ..congrats dude...I could not imagine over thinking it.. KAPOOW..dead girl elk! Way to go.
Note to self. No shoulder shots.This is what happens when a 260 gr mono metal hits shoulder bone. Bone completely shattered with thousands of fragments. Lost some good meat, but at least I was able to save the flat irons.
View attachment 52459View attachment 52460