Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: DOUBLELUNG on July 10, 2019, 09:38:10 AMTo be sure to drop any big game animal on the spot, you need to bust the brain or spinal cord. Your best shot and greatest margin of error with a bull moose is broadside, directly below the highest point of the hump and in line with his back behind the hump. Perfectly executed, you will break both shoulders and sever the spine; miss by a few inches and he will still die fast and be a fast recovery. If you take that shot and he DOESN'T drop, keep shooting because you didn't hit point of aim.Doublelung, who am I to quibble with an internet picture, but that diagram of the moose sure looks to me like it has the spine way too high as it passes between the shoulders under the hump. In my recall, there is a LOT more hump above the spine than is shown in that diagram. I'm likely wrong... but if shooting at a moose today, I'd aim lower than the diagram shows if I wanted to hit the spine under the hump. This to basically repeat, that if a hunter isn't sure where the spine is, hold on the low side of best guess.
To be sure to drop any big game animal on the spot, you need to bust the brain or spinal cord. Your best shot and greatest margin of error with a bull moose is broadside, directly below the highest point of the hump and in line with his back behind the hump. Perfectly executed, you will break both shoulders and sever the spine; miss by a few inches and he will still die fast and be a fast recovery. If you take that shot and he DOESN'T drop, keep shooting because you didn't hit point of aim.
Not this year, might go scout out the Selkirk. Honestly that shoot is a blast but the traffic and amount of people make it not worth it, going to miss going. Really hoping for a crystal mnt location someday. If I didn’t need to save all my vacation time for moose, I might have went anyway.
I have been on 6 moose hunts in North Idaho. 5 of the 6 went smoothly with normal behind the shoulder shots and the moose did not go far at all...less than 10 yards in all cases. The one that did not go smoothly...the otherwise experienced hunter got caught up in how big moose are and rumors of moose being shot and running miles. He got some barstool advice about shooting moose in the neck because their lungs are so big...bla bla bla...long story short, we get in on a good bull and I watch this guy shoot it 3x in the neck...and then the moose ran off and we never found it. Distance was 70 yards and I watched the hair/meat fly out of this moose neck with each shot from his newly acquired .375. Never found this moose. Moral of this story in my eyes...don't change your approach to shooting big game animals just because its a moose. Shoot your moose where you would shoot your elk or deer.
Quote from: JoeE on July 09, 2019, 07:51:54 PMI’ve heard the hump shot too. The moose in the pic above trotted about 100 yards with a lung shot. The other moose I shot dropped within 10 steps or so.Thats a sweet pic Joe! And running 100 yards is what I’m trying to avoid, what gun did you use?
I’ve heard the hump shot too. The moose in the pic above trotted about 100 yards with a lung shot. The other moose I shot dropped within 10 steps or so.
Quote from: steeleywhopper on July 09, 2019, 10:08:23 PMThey don't usually go anywhere with a "high shoulder" shot. Both my bulls dropped with that shot and my cow got hers in the back of the head and she did not do anything but lay her head down and never moved again.Out of curiosity......when you say lay her head down, did she tip over or stay standing for a bit?? My bull took a 212 grain bullet out of a 300 win mag to the head at 40 yards. His head dropped and his legs locked up. He stood standing for enough time for me to get better line of site and put two more behind the shoulder before he tipped over (approx 20 - 30 seconds total time).
They don't usually go anywhere with a "high shoulder" shot. Both my bulls dropped with that shot and my cow got hers in the back of the head and she did not do anything but lay her head down and never moved again.
Try this
I've worked as meat cutter since 1990 and cut many moose over the years with shot up shoulders. I see no reason at all to keep poking holes in a moose hemorrhaging the best game meat there is. A shot 6-8 inches below the hump will drop them immediately in their tracks. We've killed about 60 and that shot placements been used on over 40 of them.