What thermal scope would you use?

What thermal scope would you use?

Very well said and very true all all the long range hunters Ive come across.The anti-long range argument doesn’t stack up, never does, never will. A well practiced shooter with the right tool can shoot 1,000yds with little difficulty. All the usual caveats apply, training, gear, practice etc.
The alpine shooting community here eat the anti-long rangers for breakfast. It’s actually quite insulting to them, the insinuation that they are “unethical” or whatever. Very few of the mudslingers have the faintest idea of what’s involved, and how all encompassing the discipline is. If you turned up here and got on an alpine guy’s case with the “other peoples’ children” type comments, you’d be on a one-way ticket home pretty quickly, visa cancelled.
Seriously, the degree of investment, prep, study, practice that goes into it, not to mention the gunsmithing, load development, the reloading itself, meteorology, technology, it’s a skill set and discipline that should be respected in no different a way to the very best of the close in deer stalkers. Here we have hunting TV programs that celebrate the achievement of the long range hunter, the extraordinary lengths they go to to get the chance at the shot!
The long range guys are the most schooled shooters I know, educated in what they do, heavily invested in their discipline. Many of these guys shoot competitions, pretty much all of them, in fact I would wager that the typical long range shooter makes one shot at an animal for every 99 he makes at a 1,000yd target.
You can pick holes in any of the hunting disciplines if you like. Bow hunting, black powder muzzleloaders, low powered straight walled cartridges, long range, shotguns, trapping, hunting with dogs, helicopter hog shooting, take your pick. But within each and every discipline there are lots of expert guys who are proud of their capabilities, and rightly so. They don’t deserve to be classed as “other peoples’ children” by the unskilled and unpracticed.
I don’t see much difference between this kind of thing and the well-heeled aristocracy arriving by helicopter to shoot the finest Scottish trophy stags on the poshest of historic estates.
So this is quite easy, give the average shooter in the UK the chance to manage FC land with the same rules applied as the FC and the UK deer population would crash. Rule- None, shoot what you like day and night, spotlight night vision all expectable,.I imagine it and hope the UK never adopts such a system which exists as a fantasy in the minds of a couple of people with little concept of the other factors required in managing deer on FC leases.
The reason FC Rangers exist is because the job is so huge that it would be very difficult to find enough DSC2 qualified stalkers to reliably give up enough of their time in the periods when the general public arent around in mass numbers ie Mon-Thurs 0500-0800. Even for free. There are FC blocks entirely unmanaged as the FC wants too much money from recreational stalkers and too high a deer cull for ground which has too many people and where static high seats would get torn down and destroyed.
As for moderators not allowed, yes lets go back to the 1950s- more hearing damage and only one chance of a shot. Do you think a Ranger wont be able to hear a moderated shot on a block? You even mention US hunters having to show carcass/meat to a Ranger which would negate any more shot than a tag allowed. Meat for self use only-no selling venison - just as we reach the biggest glut of supply and lack of demand ever.
The comments displayed makes me wonder how some are allowed out without a nurse, never mind firearms.
But as I understand it (Randy Newbergh youtube) only a few States have public lands with a tag systemAll of the other tags are in a lottery system for the same area, so anybody can get one. They just sell off a couple of tags for the best areas every year to bump up the pot.
I agree with you on your statement about the money throwing types shooting trophy stags in scotland and elsewhere. I think it’s some sort of status symbol perhaps? . Paying someone to do everything for you is not hunting, it’s also something that I personally find disturbing and unpleasant. It certainly makes genuine hunters look bad in the eyes of the less well informed onlookers who lump us all together and condemn hunting.The only part you got wrong @Olaf was the cartridge.
JJ Liautaud uses a Gunwerks 7mm LRM.
It is interesting to note how much heat this guy got over his African big game hunting. There was an orchestrated campaign against him and his franchise chain about five years ago. He’s sold out of the business now. Worth a comfy couple of billion USD.
Despite the manner in which this video was presented, and our supposed outrage about a lazy fat guy and army of arse lickers, it is well worth pointing out the history of this guy’s philanthropy. I can’t be bothered to simply replicate what you can find yourself on Google, but I can guarantee you there’s more than just a few million dollars of this guy’s cash gone into conservation and game management in various different forms.
Like I said in my earlier post I don’t really care either way. The video as it is presented is not a pleasant watch and of course it is not the kind of hunting that we mere mortals aspire to. But life is never as simple as that. Unfortunately for the hirsute Trent, the super-rich fat man is always likely to win in the end. That’s been the way it goes since before the pharaohs. Whilst the common man will almost always support Trent and wish he had got his bull, in one way or the other Trent will benefit from the dollars that the fat man donates. It’s a strange world we live in, and it pays not to be too emotional when assessing what’s fair, what’s not, and why things are the way they are.
I don’t see much difference between this kind of thing and the well-heeled aristocracy arriving by helicopter to shoot the finest Scottish trophy stags on the poshest of historic estates.
I agree with you on your statement about the money throwing types shooting trophy stags in scotland and elsewhere. I think it’s some sort of status symbol perhaps? . Paying someone to do everything for you is not hunting, it’s also something that I personally find disturbing and unpleasant. It certainly makes genuine hunters look bad in the eyes of the less well informed onlookers who lump us all together and condemn hunting.
admittedly, that man who squeezed the trigger on the Elk bull does say that he’s not a hunter, I just wonder why people like that behave like that. A badly presented video of a bad situation that does much harm in my opinion.
kindest regards, Olaf
So this is quite easy, give the average shooter in the UK the chance to manage FC land with the same rules applied as the FC and the UK deer population would crash. Rule- None, shoot what you like day and night, spotlight night vision all expectable,.
NO DSC rule apply, shoot a number of beast in one herd, leave them where they are, and carry on down the road. When finished turn round and collect all slain and gralloch, some up to an hour after being shot. Then heap them up in trailers! etc etc.
Yes this is reality and people think the FC do things right!! for every team of FC boys doing it right there are ten that don't.
Hmmmmm...There is a shot towards the end of the video of the shooter sitting under a shade cloth with his mate while the servants labour in the hot sun.

I only know things from my experience in the field. I have taken many people out hunting in various forms and the same can be said for stalkers as can be said for lurcher men.So how many people follow the above practices commenting on this thread and then complain the video. Should i pull up a chair with popcorn or listen to the sounds of crickets?
I would do that If I were the paying guest.I think the video was actually presented very well because it was clearly designed to expose the situation for what it is. I suspect some of us that have watched the video might have skipped through to what they think are the best bits but the preamble is important to watch and understand. There is a shot towards the end of the video of the shooter sitting under a shade cloth with his mate while the servants labour in the hot sun. To me that sums up the whole debacle.
That’s a fair point, and to a large extent I agree with you. Only ( I did watch it all) I didn’t get the impression from the video , that the lad whom had been hunting that Elk for the past year , did anything other than film it all because he didn’t have any other realistic options. He certainly seemed quite happy about it all. Maybe I got the wrong end of the stick though.I think the video was actually presented very well because it was clearly designed to expose the situation for what it is. I suspect some of us that have watched the video might have skipped through to what they think are the best bits but the preamble is important to watch and understand. There is a shot towards the end of the video of the shooter sitting under a shade cloth with his mate while the servants labour in the hot sun. To me that sums up the whole debacle.
I would do that If I were the paying guest.
What is the difference to someone here sitting in an agocat or gator whilst the Ghillie or guide deals with the fallen beast?
I agree, especially if they have run into cover and you have to find them, but have you actually waited and watched a deer die for a long period of time as in the video without putting another shot into it?Now as for the video and the fact the beast took 3 minute to die, well I have seen a LOT of roe deer take longer, even more fallow and Reds, even more sika and so on.
I shot a few roe 30+ years ago with the 243 that ran between 250meters and 1km, all perfect HL shots!!
Firstly I watched the video and I would not have done any different unto the Elk stopped moving/dying. after were not two shots fired?I agree, especially if they have run into cover and you have to find them, but have you actually waited and watched a deer die for a long period of time as in the video without putting another shot into it?
He had the opportunity to end it's suffering and wasn't give it, shoot, reload, another shot if necessary.
Like you I have, and still have a .243, it was my first rifle almost 30 years ago, but I have to say, a perfect HL shot running for up to 1km, you must have some tough roe deer where you are, but lets not digress into the .243 debate, I love it and always will.
Cheers
Richard