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Author Topic: My 2012 Rosey Bull  (Read 7872 times)

Offline Goldeneye

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Re: My 2012 Rosey Bull
« Reply #15 on: November 13, 2012, 10:33:58 AM »
Did he stop on the top of the crest for the shot?  How did you get him to pause?

There was no pause.  He was actually in the air cresting the ridge.  Literally, the only shot I had as he would be gone over the other side after cresting the ridge.  It's been a while since I hit a running bull so hard that he came to the ground and didn't move.  I've killed running bulls before, though.  This is not a shot I would recomend for someone new to the sport.  A lot can go wrong...   
« Last Edit: November 13, 2012, 01:55:29 PM by Goldeneye »

Offline snocohunter

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Re: My 2012 Rosey Bull
« Reply #16 on: November 13, 2012, 12:29:52 PM »
Congrats on your bull. I don't big game hunt, but have been doing my homework to prepare for an Elk hunt in Montana I'm planning. I want to prepare for every possible situation. How do you practice for running shots without actually shooting at a real moving animal? You mentioned you have a lot of experience hunting, but i have always been told if the shot is marginal don't take it. I would never want to have to track am elk that wasn't well due to my error . I guess I'm just trying to learn how to make that judgment to pull the trigger or not. A lot of old timers i know, as well as from comments I've read here frown upon those type of shots.

Offline Goldeneye

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Re: My 2012 Rosey Bull
« Reply #17 on: November 13, 2012, 02:15:08 PM »
Lot's of shooting and knowing the load you are shooting.  Being able to clearly see the target in the crosshairs.  Knowing what your load does down range in different conditions.  Having a load that will hold together while breaking through bone.   

A running bull is never a preferred shot.  I prefer them standing still as most do.  They do not always cooperate  At 200 yards I know my load will hit where the cross-hairs are with no drop.  I am swinging on him much like you do duck hunting.  I am not trying to be fine with the shot.  I am actually going for the front shoulders.  A bull will not be lost or cripple off with broken front shoulders.

I learned about elk hunting from my dad.  Where we lived there were lot's of elk.  He got me on my first bull when I was 10.  His words were to always"break them down".  Roosevelt elk are tough animals.



A type of shot I will never take is one where all you have to shoot at is the butt end of the animal.  If you do this you damage a lot of the meat, probably gut shoot the animal etc...  To me this is the type of marginal shot I won't take.

I see you live local to me.  Do you belong to the Seattle Rifle and Pistol Assoc. with the range down in Machias? 

Offline luvmystang67

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Re: My 2012 Rosey Bull
« Reply #18 on: November 13, 2012, 02:50:32 PM »
 
Congrats on your bull. I don't big game hunt, but have been doing my homework to prepare for an Elk hunt in Montana I'm planning. I want to prepare for every possible situation. How do you practice for running shots without actually shooting at a real moving animal? You mentioned you have a lot of experience hunting, but i have always been told if the shot is marginal don't take it. I would never want to have to track am elk that wasn't well due to my error . I guess I'm just trying to learn how to make that judgment to pull the trigger or not. A lot of old timers i know, as well as from comments I've read here frown upon those type of shots.

I typically try to startle my deer with a quick blast above their head and then blaze them on the run with my semi auto.  Figure if I can learn how to take down a deer at full blast, an elk should be no problem.  Start small and work your way up  :IBCOOL:

Offline snocohunter

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Re: My 2012 Rosey Bull
« Reply #19 on: November 13, 2012, 03:27:01 PM »
Good information. Just trying to learn. I am not a member there, i thought there was a waiting list?

Offline snocohunter

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Re: My 2012 Rosey Bull
« Reply #20 on: November 13, 2012, 03:33:47 PM »
I typically try to startle my deer with a quick blast above their head and then blaze them on the run with my semi auto.  Figure if I can learn how to take down a deer at full blast, an elk should be no problem.  Start small and work your way up  :IBCOOL:

May as well challenge yourself and your weapon on a regular basis. What's the fun in a standing still shot?  :mgun:

Offline Goldeneye

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Re: My 2012 Rosey Bull
« Reply #21 on: November 13, 2012, 03:36:06 PM »
Good information. Just trying to learn. I am not a member there, i thought there was a waiting list?

There is a waiting list.  2 to 3 years long.  You best get your name on the list if you would like easy to access to a range to work with your rifle loads. 

Offline snocohunter

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Re: My 2012 Rosey Bull
« Reply #22 on: November 13, 2012, 09:39:26 PM »
There is a waiting list.  2 to 3 years long.  You best get your name on the list if you would like easy to access to a range to work with your rifle loads.

That's what I had heard. I don't reload yet either. That range kinda has a bad reputation of being a lot of elitist a-holes that think their crap don't stink. Probably not true, but it kinda shyed me away. Never understood why its called Seattle anything. We're a long ways from Seattle and its way of doing things.

It is right in my backyard though. May have to stop by and see for myself. Do they ever allow visitors?

Offline Goldeneye

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Re: My 2012 Rosey Bull
« Reply #23 on: November 13, 2012, 09:56:08 PM »
There are public sight in days and other events.  Check out their calendar to see when those happen.  There are several members on here that belong.  The most famous (or infamous) being H20hunter.  I have not ran into the elitist guys yet.  I just work my hunt loads there. 

 


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