Real respect is due the "Stalker" who can wrestle one to the ground and break it's neck!!!
M.
Recon in Europe you'll almost get jail time for mishandling animals in such a way and rightly so.
Stalking is one way of hunting or culling animals, I think it our duty to control the numbers of deer in such a way that we upset the countryside the least, let the animals suffer the least. This should be our priority not some ego satisfying "stalk as close as you can". In those cases I think it would be better to leave animal culling to professionals, deer "stalkers" should then rather play with a playstation.....
The reason why I am saying this is that in all my years of hunting most wounding of animals were at either extreme long range by people who don't have the "know how" or at very short range with hastily taken snap shots. What I am criticising is not that animals are shot at short range but that some "stalkers" would not take a shot from a decent mid range rested position at a rested animal to make a clean kill....no rather try stalk in closer ...and closer just to get a kick out of it.....then the shot has to be taken for egos sake. I would not hunt with such a person.
We (including myself) make enough mistakes even with best intensions when out after deer, don't need an ego trip making it worse.
My take of an ideal "stalking" rifle: depends on the countryside that one shoots, maybe also animal behaviour.
Dense cover shooting will dictate a different rifle than open country.
I have put a lot of effort in building or putting together my own rifles to cover different situations.
For deer culling in dense plantations an old leveraction 30-30 with red dot sight and 160gr leverevolution handles nicely and stops deer quite well. I don't like this kind of shooting as it can get messy however it is often the only way of getting deer that are trapped inside fenced in dense cover areas. For heavy cover and mixed terrain I have a light barrelled 20" 308 with 3-12x50 S&B flash dot scope, I limit this rifle to 300m although it would be capable of further.
For general deer culling I have a 22" barrelled mid weight 308 with 6.5-20x50 Zeiss weighing 4.2 kg, with this rifle I have taken deer from 4m to slightly over 400m.
For hill stalking or open terrain I have an ultra light tactical style rifle, again 308, palma barrel 20" with a heavy 6-24 Kahles tactical scope. Rifle weighs around 10.5lbs including the Kahles. This rifle is ideal for precision shots at our smallish deer in high grass mostly meaning neck or head shots.
I have shot several deer off-hand with it too.
All my rifles apart from the leveraction have aftermarket hand lapped match grade barrels, stocks made to suit larger scopes and scopes have bdc turrets. The lightweight hunting rifle with 3-12x50 flash dot scope might be the best all-round hunting rifle.
edi