Last week I shot my spike elk and had another hunter claim he shot it. A first for me, I was dumbfounded at the situation, here it is:
My group of friends had spotted the heard of elk in the open of some large fields on public land at first light. As we are making a plan to go after them another rig pulls up and a guy jumps out with his rifle and starts to hike toward the herd. So my partner and I grab our gear and go toward the herd as well. The other guy heads down a ravine with timber and we take the high side of the ravine. I lose sight of the other hunter in the timber and get to 350yds of the herd and get set up. Im prone behind my rifle, a 338LM Ackley Improved shooting a 300gr Accubond, using my bipod and a rear squeeze bag. I dial up 0.9mil on my Leupold Mk4 M5A2 for my drop and pick out a spike bull that is not moving around much, he is tall with dried velvet still attached to one horn. I expected the bullet to pass through and waited for the elk behind him to clear out.
Once I got a good clear background I center my reticle on his vitals, he was quartering away, and I fire. I see the bullet impact right were I was aiming and could also hear the impact. The elk hunched up and took a few staggering steps toward the rest of the heard, which was now on the run. I came up to my knees and looked through my binoculars, not wanting to shoot again because there was now a lot of elk in the background.
My bull is not moving and Im waiting for him to drop when the other hunter lets off two rounds from several hundred yards behind me. I turn to see where he was shooting from since I was down range, he stopped as the herd had ran off. My partner and I didn't see or hear any of his shots hit anything. My partner even went over the hill to see if he had wounded any elk in the herd. I get up and walk over to my dead bull, and the other hunter comes hiking up to me as Im grounding my gear and says that he shot the bull.
I explain to him that this was the elk I shot and even showed him the dried velvet on the horn that I had seen through my scope. He argued that he shot the bull. I showed him where I aimed, rolled it over and found the exit hole, there was only one bullet hole on the bull. He was still arguing that he shot it. So, I showed him where I shot from, that I dialed my drop, that I saw the impact. He still insisted he shot it. Then I asked him what yardage he shot it as, he replied that he didn't bother to range it because he was so close enough to them and shooting a 338Rum. I asked where he shot from, he pointed out a tree next to a fence line, I pulled out my laser and ranged the tree as 580yds. When I told him the range and that there was no way he was "close enough" he said that he "held high."
At this point I pretty much quit entertaining his story. He then asked me if I wanted to play rock-paper-scissors to decide who gets the bull. I laughed, said no because I was 100% certain it was the one I shot. The other hunter finally went on his way grumbling.
When I was quartering up the elk I found that my bullet had hit ribs, liver, lungs, and apparently had not expanded, the exit hole also through rib was about the diameter of my finger. I think if I had been shooting my usual 300gr SMK or 300gr Berger Hybrid I would have gotten better expansion and the bull would have dropped on impact and avoided the whole situation.
Later I ran into some people from work hunting the same area, shared my story and they said the same guys had tried to claim a bull someone else had shot a few years ago and the state police (our fish and game officers) had to get involved.
Well, thats my story. The whole thing kind of ruined my hunt. Has anyone else ever experienced something like that in the field?
My group of friends had spotted the heard of elk in the open of some large fields on public land at first light. As we are making a plan to go after them another rig pulls up and a guy jumps out with his rifle and starts to hike toward the herd. So my partner and I grab our gear and go toward the herd as well. The other guy heads down a ravine with timber and we take the high side of the ravine. I lose sight of the other hunter in the timber and get to 350yds of the herd and get set up. Im prone behind my rifle, a 338LM Ackley Improved shooting a 300gr Accubond, using my bipod and a rear squeeze bag. I dial up 0.9mil on my Leupold Mk4 M5A2 for my drop and pick out a spike bull that is not moving around much, he is tall with dried velvet still attached to one horn. I expected the bullet to pass through and waited for the elk behind him to clear out.
Once I got a good clear background I center my reticle on his vitals, he was quartering away, and I fire. I see the bullet impact right were I was aiming and could also hear the impact. The elk hunched up and took a few staggering steps toward the rest of the heard, which was now on the run. I came up to my knees and looked through my binoculars, not wanting to shoot again because there was now a lot of elk in the background.
My bull is not moving and Im waiting for him to drop when the other hunter lets off two rounds from several hundred yards behind me. I turn to see where he was shooting from since I was down range, he stopped as the herd had ran off. My partner and I didn't see or hear any of his shots hit anything. My partner even went over the hill to see if he had wounded any elk in the herd. I get up and walk over to my dead bull, and the other hunter comes hiking up to me as Im grounding my gear and says that he shot the bull.
I explain to him that this was the elk I shot and even showed him the dried velvet on the horn that I had seen through my scope. He argued that he shot the bull. I showed him where I aimed, rolled it over and found the exit hole, there was only one bullet hole on the bull. He was still arguing that he shot it. So, I showed him where I shot from, that I dialed my drop, that I saw the impact. He still insisted he shot it. Then I asked him what yardage he shot it as, he replied that he didn't bother to range it because he was so close enough to them and shooting a 338Rum. I asked where he shot from, he pointed out a tree next to a fence line, I pulled out my laser and ranged the tree as 580yds. When I told him the range and that there was no way he was "close enough" he said that he "held high."
At this point I pretty much quit entertaining his story. He then asked me if I wanted to play rock-paper-scissors to decide who gets the bull. I laughed, said no because I was 100% certain it was the one I shot. The other hunter finally went on his way grumbling.
When I was quartering up the elk I found that my bullet had hit ribs, liver, lungs, and apparently had not expanded, the exit hole also through rib was about the diameter of my finger. I think if I had been shooting my usual 300gr SMK or 300gr Berger Hybrid I would have gotten better expansion and the bull would have dropped on impact and avoided the whole situation.
Later I ran into some people from work hunting the same area, shared my story and they said the same guys had tried to claim a bull someone else had shot a few years ago and the state police (our fish and game officers) had to get involved.
Well, thats my story. The whole thing kind of ruined my hunt. Has anyone else ever experienced something like that in the field?