100% agree.I couldn't rationalize hunting large game with an underpowered small bore rifle. There are too many variables that have to be aligned to maximize the probability of an ethical kill.
I grew up hunting with rimfires and witnessed one too many shots go wrong when they should have been kill shots. It's never a sure thing, but the odds of making an ethical kill with a precision rifle is generally around power and larger caliber.
I hunt since I was a kid.
I would NEVER try to walk in the woods hunting a bear or a wolf or a cougar (without dogs) with a .22 lr, notwithstanding they could be killed with a brain or heart shot.
Big calibers were made for big animals.
Few months ago during a buffalo hunting in South America, a hunter was killed by the buffalo after receiving the shot.
Paper shooters and gel buyers may have some ideas that are not so precise in hunting circumstances.
Video: vino a cazar a Argentina y lo mató un búfalo
El presidente de la Federación Mexicana de Caza falleció luego de ser atacado por un animal durante una excursión por el país.
www.ole.com.ar
In the video you can clearly see how after receiving the shot, the buffalo has enough strength to kill the hunter before expiring just aside the hunter…. (The author of the article I read would say: “Just because he was not carring the .177 that penetrates more than the .357…..)
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