Free: Contests & Raffles.
Kind of funny, one of my long range shooter friends ran into a buck while hiking to a spotting spot. Admitted the deer was only about 50-60 yards away and trotting thru a small opening. He admitted it kind of confused him a bit and when he finally got a shot off it was a clean miss. Decided he needed to spend a little time practicing his close range snap shots. Gave us a good laugh when a guy who hits the gong every shot at 1000 yards would miss a deer at 50 yards. Different skill set involved.
This assumes the regs are biology/game management driven. Too often they're emotion driven. "OMG he can kill Bambi's dad at 1000 yards. We need a law".
Over the years the only way I've found to for sure get a spooked deer to stop is a well placed bullet. Trotting at 50 yards I've seldom had a problem getting em to stop, but learned to shoot quickly hunting the thick oak brush in Utah. Kinda like jump shooting ducks.
Quote from: baldopepper on December 24, 2024, 07:43:09 AMOver the years the only way I've found to for sure get a spooked deer to stop is a well placed bullet. Trotting at 50 yards I've seldom had a problem getting em to stop, but learned to shoot quickly hunting the thick oak brush in Utah. Kinda like jump shooting ducks.One could make the argument that taking snap shots on moving animals in thick cover is much more likely to result in poor shot placement than taking your time, setting up properly and dialing on a stationary un-spooked critter at 600 yards. If you're confident in your skillset to do so then more power to you, but that's a pretty good illustration of how ethics isn't a black and white issue and how it all boils down to the individual and what they're comfortable with. IMO 90% of the hate against "long range" hunting is simply one generation being uncomfortable with something they're not used to because they didn't grow up with it being the norm.