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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Caribou hunt question
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<blockquote data-quote="A/1-61" data-source="post: 2936489" data-attributes="member: 127316"><p>I've always hunted caribou with a .270 Winchester. I've shot four over the years and none of them ever took a step after they were hit. Two Boone and Crockets. Average range, from point blank to 250 yards. George River outfitters are the guys I've used twice. The Paquette brothers . The guides work hard and we've always flown from Schefferville to Chateaugay lake. 40 or 50 years ago, everybody on the hunt would shoot a pair of trophy bulls. Since then, in the last 20 years, the herds are become fractured and less predictable. That's the way it was on my last hunt and we did move to another lake by pontoon plane. Some people say global warming, others say due to our strategic air command planes doing maneuvers up there and breaking the sound barrier. Who knows. Also, black bear abound.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="A/1-61, post: 2936489, member: 127316"] I've always hunted caribou with a .270 Winchester. I've shot four over the years and none of them ever took a step after they were hit. Two Boone and Crockets. Average range, from point blank to 250 yards. George River outfitters are the guys I've used twice. The Paquette brothers . The guides work hard and we've always flown from Schefferville to Chateaugay lake. 40 or 50 years ago, everybody on the hunt would shoot a pair of trophy bulls. Since then, in the last 20 years, the herds are become fractured and less predictable. That's the way it was on my last hunt and we did move to another lake by pontoon plane. Some people say global warming, others say due to our strategic air command planes doing maneuvers up there and breaking the sound barrier. Who knows. Also, black bear abound. [/QUOTE]
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