30 years ago I worked as a contracted hunter. The contract was to cull approx 4000 'roos of a water conservation area of N.S.W. My oppo George and I filled the quota in approx 5 months.
The government supplied fuel and ammo ( a pallet of WW 22/250 ) we made our money from the hides, that was before PETA ruined it along with the price of Fox pelts.
My point is that when you shoot 30-40 roos each night and have to skin them, one soon knows when or when not to take the shot.
I have shot them from as close as 15ft to around 400 yards at night but 400 yards is not the norm. Sooner or later one likes to test ones skill but I soon wised up that 400 yards or even 300 yards at night is foolish, not because of the distance but because of the terrain from which to recover the carcass.
I am amused somewhat by this continuing debate, mostly because is not the title of this web site "The Stalking Directory" Stalking being the operative word.As for bowhunting , it is very popular here and most of the blokes I know that practice bowhunting are also skilled rifle hunters who want to broaden their experiences and combine both disciplines on their hunts.Most, if not all agree, that having to at times, crawl along on the ground to position themselves for a good killing shot provides much more satisfaction than LR shots taken with a firearm.
Furthermore , I have taken 2 long shots in my hunting life since the '70's ( as opposed to culling life ) both vivid in my memory because of the rarity and both were just around 300 paces , yes paces as I stepped both out to satisfy my curiosity. Both shots were on 2 troublesome feral boars that were rooting up the farmers sunflowers. Both were shot offhand.I had the confidence of youth and perhaps a modicum of skill and these boars had escaped unscathed on a number of occasions. A judgement call was made and the boars thankfully expired and thinking about it now having hunted in all terrains here and in N.Z. apart from those boars all game has been taken under 200 yards. Even now with a .260 Rem top class Kahles scope state of the art bipod , I still choose to " stalk " as close as I can get and if it means passing up a shot then so be it , the game will still be there tomorrow.
A very good friend of mine traveled to Mongolia on a guided Elk Hunt ( Altai Wapiti more correctly known ) the only trophy he saw that was worth the trouble was ranged at a shade under 500 yards with no possibility of stalking closer, too many cows between him and the Bull , he declined the shot , his decision based upon the factors present and the economics of his decision was not considered. And knowing my mate as I do , if possible he would have taken all day to get to a comfortable distance from which to take the shot, which knowing him would have been less than 200 yards.
That in my opinion is hunting ethics.
Mike.
The government supplied fuel and ammo ( a pallet of WW 22/250 ) we made our money from the hides, that was before PETA ruined it along with the price of Fox pelts.
My point is that when you shoot 30-40 roos each night and have to skin them, one soon knows when or when not to take the shot.
I have shot them from as close as 15ft to around 400 yards at night but 400 yards is not the norm. Sooner or later one likes to test ones skill but I soon wised up that 400 yards or even 300 yards at night is foolish, not because of the distance but because of the terrain from which to recover the carcass.
I am amused somewhat by this continuing debate, mostly because is not the title of this web site "The Stalking Directory" Stalking being the operative word.As for bowhunting , it is very popular here and most of the blokes I know that practice bowhunting are also skilled rifle hunters who want to broaden their experiences and combine both disciplines on their hunts.Most, if not all agree, that having to at times, crawl along on the ground to position themselves for a good killing shot provides much more satisfaction than LR shots taken with a firearm.
Furthermore , I have taken 2 long shots in my hunting life since the '70's ( as opposed to culling life ) both vivid in my memory because of the rarity and both were just around 300 paces , yes paces as I stepped both out to satisfy my curiosity. Both shots were on 2 troublesome feral boars that were rooting up the farmers sunflowers. Both were shot offhand.I had the confidence of youth and perhaps a modicum of skill and these boars had escaped unscathed on a number of occasions. A judgement call was made and the boars thankfully expired and thinking about it now having hunted in all terrains here and in N.Z. apart from those boars all game has been taken under 200 yards. Even now with a .260 Rem top class Kahles scope state of the art bipod , I still choose to " stalk " as close as I can get and if it means passing up a shot then so be it , the game will still be there tomorrow.
A very good friend of mine traveled to Mongolia on a guided Elk Hunt ( Altai Wapiti more correctly known ) the only trophy he saw that was worth the trouble was ranged at a shade under 500 yards with no possibility of stalking closer, too many cows between him and the Bull , he declined the shot , his decision based upon the factors present and the economics of his decision was not considered. And knowing my mate as I do , if possible he would have taken all day to get to a comfortable distance from which to take the shot, which knowing him would have been less than 200 yards.
That in my opinion is hunting ethics.
Mike.

