





Wapiti wrote:Here we go, im going to upset some people.
This is completely from doing this, myself, for 40 years. I'm not quoting anyone else.
My opinion is there's no excuse for not being able to stalk up on them from downwind, day or night. The is no impossible, only no skill.
Even if they're in the middle of a crop paddock a km wide, they come in on easily identifiable paths, where they can be hit downwind from 10m away sitting quietly.
Pigs have hopeless eyes if you aren't moving around of talking, or stuffing about on a phone as some people can't stop doing during stakeout where you need to learn to focus, sit still or stalk with 100% silence into the breeze with the suitable clothing and quiet footwear.
Pretty good ears and brilliant noses on these things.
I learnt a lot from stalking difficult boars, big fellas that has escaped everyone else including dumb dogs, and from rearing feral pigs into very interesting and loyal pets. In fact one boar ended up finding pigs hidden in huge flood rubbish piles and windrows for me.
On the long range energy side, the wider and faster the projectiles, the better. Not looking for the cheapest or least recoiling cartridge, or from watching long range metal gong competitions. Again, not giving living animals respect, they didn't ask to be pests, they were just born like you, and need to be removed without stress, pain or worse, running off from some wannabe sniper.
But having tried and being sucked in to this mainly city-dreamer-rangepest-craze myself, and realising animals move after you've tripped the shot, it's all bullsh*t and a wounded animal will result in a "find somewhere else to experiment" ban from me.
Calibres? Yeah I sarcastically cane the 6.5 Manbun/6.5 Tampon because a few clicks less drop is all this craze is, and paper punching using long projectiles going slow is not hunting, period. If using a bit more powder in a bigger cartridge breaks the bank after you spend $500 on fuel, tyres, vehicle wear and tear hours and time off work for a hunt, you're kidding yourself. I don't fall for that rubbish excuse either. OK, yes on a shooting range doing some match with 50 cartridges, fine, but thats holes in paper, not animals. Recoil? FFS.
Does a 300WM perform better than a 6.5? That's a given. 300 RUM? 338 Lapua in a 1/2 MOA rifle with a 25x scope and suitable bullets? Yes the difference is there, but the animals walking off during projectile flight, or your wobbly rest, or wind, or you f**king up your rubbish phone app ballistic chart, is why you learn to stalk.


deye243 wrote:Wapiti wrote:Here we go, im going to upset some people.
This is completely from doing this, myself, for 40 years. I'm not quoting anyone else.
My opinion is there's no excuse for not being able to stalk up on them from downwind, day or night. The is no impossible, only no skill.
Even if they're in the middle of a crop paddock a km wide, they come in on easily identifiable paths, where they can be hit downwind from 10m away sitting quietly.
Pigs have hopeless eyes if you aren't moving around of talking, or stuffing about on a phone as some people can't stop doing during stakeout where you need to learn to focus, sit still or stalk with 100% silence into the breeze with the suitable clothing and quiet footwear.
Pretty good ears and brilliant noses on these things.
I learnt a lot from stalking difficult boars, big fellas that has escaped everyone else including dumb dogs, and from rearing feral pigs into very interesting and loyal pets. In fact one boar ended up finding pigs hidden in huge flood rubbish piles and windrows for me.
On the long range energy side, the wider and faster the projectiles, the better. Not looking for the cheapest or least recoiling cartridge, or from watching long range metal gong competitions. Again, not giving living animals respect, they didn't ask to be pests, they were just born like you, and need to be removed without stress, pain or worse, running off from some wannabe sniper.
But having tried and being sucked in to this mainly city-dreamer-rangepest-craze myself, and realising animals move after you've tripped the shot, it's all bullsh*t and a wounded animal will result in a "find somewhere else to experiment" ban from me.
Calibres? Yeah I sarcastically cane the 6.5 Manbun/6.5 Tampon because a few clicks less drop is all this craze is, and paper punching using long projectiles going slow is not hunting, period. If using a bit more powder in a bigger cartridge breaks the bank after you spend $500 on fuel, tyres, vehicle wear and tear hours and time off work for a hunt, you're kidding yourself. I don't fall for that rubbish excuse either. OK, yes on a shooting range doing some match with 50 cartridges, fine, but thats holes in paper, not animals. Recoil? FFS.
Does a 300WM perform better than a 6.5? That's a given. 300 RUM? 338 Lapua in a 1/2 MOA rifle with a 25x scope and suitable bullets? Yes the difference is there, but the animals walking off during projectile flight, or your wobbly rest, or wind, or you f**king up your rubbish phone app ballistic chart, is why you learn to stalk.
Don't worry you have not upset me but how far will animal walk in 0.58 of a second

Zach wrote:deye243 wrote:Wapiti wrote:Here we go, im going to upset some people.
This is completely from doing this, myself, for 40 years. I'm not quoting anyone else.
My opinion is there's no excuse for not being able to stalk up on them from downwind, day or night. The is no impossible, only no skill.
Even if they're in the middle of a crop paddock a km wide, they come in on easily identifiable paths, where they can be hit downwind from 10m away sitting quietly.
Pigs have hopeless eyes if you aren't moving around of talking, or stuffing about on a phone as some people can't stop doing during stakeout where you need to learn to focus, sit still or stalk with 100% silence into the breeze with the suitable clothing and quiet footwear.
Pretty good ears and brilliant noses on these things.
I learnt a lot from stalking difficult boars, big fellas that has escaped everyone else including dumb dogs, and from rearing feral pigs into very interesting and loyal pets. In fact one boar ended up finding pigs hidden in huge flood rubbish piles and windrows for me.
On the long range energy side, the wider and faster the projectiles, the better. Not looking for the cheapest or least recoiling cartridge, or from watching long range metal gong competitions. Again, not giving living animals respect, they didn't ask to be pests, they were just born like you, and need to be removed without stress, pain or worse, running off from some wannabe sniper.
But having tried and being sucked in to this mainly city-dreamer-rangepest-craze myself, and realising animals move after you've tripped the shot, it's all bullsh*t and a wounded animal will result in a "find somewhere else to experiment" ban from me.
Calibres? Yeah I sarcastically cane the 6.5 Manbun/6.5 Tampon because a few clicks less drop is all this craze is, and paper punching using long projectiles going slow is not hunting, period. If using a bit more powder in a bigger cartridge breaks the bank after you spend $500 on fuel, tyres, vehicle wear and tear hours and time off work for a hunt, you're kidding yourself. I don't fall for that rubbish excuse either. OK, yes on a shooting range doing some match with 50 cartridges, fine, but thats holes in paper, not animals. Recoil? FFS.
Does a 300WM perform better than a 6.5? That's a given. 300 RUM? 338 Lapua in a 1/2 MOA rifle with a 25x scope and suitable bullets? Yes the difference is there, but the animals walking off during projectile flight, or your wobbly rest, or wind, or you f**king up your rubbish phone app ballistic chart, is why you learn to stalk.
Don't worry you have not upset me but how far will animal walk in 0.58 of a second
Not far, but enough to turn a lung shot into a gut shot, or a quick brain death into a blown off jaw


Harrison S wrote:Have just started running my livestock on a new agistment property... evidence of pigs everywhere and dogs everywhere... the issue is that this particular field that the pigs seem to live is impossible to get close to... we are going to have to shoot these blighters from an overlooking Ridge, and will be shooting 300-500m shots with thermal...
What are the opinions on the best calibers for this Range? Im looking for a fast hard hitting round that is consistent... Definitely want them dropping on the spot... I feel like a 303, 308, and 30-06 will be a bit out of their depth at these ranges, so some people are saying 7mm-08, 6.5 PRC, 270win, 7mm rem mag, I've even had the 300 winmag and 338 winmag recommended... and of course, the ever present recommendation of the 6.5 manbun...
Let the conversation begin... keen to get some unbiased opinions, especially experienced ones...




