Moose Hunting: Choosing the Right Rifle, Cartridge and Bullet
Shooting a moose is a once-per-lifetime event for most hunters. You want the right rifle, cartridge and bullet to do the job properly. But can you handle the recoil necessary to cleanly kill a 1,000-pound or heavier moose?
You bet you can.
Moose, despite their size, are not all that durable. It just takes them time to realize they're dead. I've shot more than one bull that stood contemplating the noise he'd heard for a half minute before wobbling and falling over. Then the real work began.
Up north, locals have shot moose for decades with 222 Remington and 223 Remington rifles. They consider the 243 Winchester and 30-30 Winchester more than adequate. But how do you square this with that old story about John Nosler back in the 1940s? He supposedly shot a mud-caked bull again and again with a 300 H&H Magnum before finally tipping it over. He then went home and created the Partition bullet. Whose stories can we believe?
All of them. The truth is that little bullets with pinprick precision can bring a bull to the table. And big, fast bullets if not properly constructed can lead to flesh wounds and frustration. As with most big game shooting, the bullet matters more than the caliber, cartridge or velocity.
So let's start with the bullet. Unless you're shooting at least a .338-inch bullet or a low-velocity round (under 2,700 fps MV), shy away from traditional cup-and-core projectiles with soft lead cores. These are the type that sometimes pancake on contact or break into pieces, none of which then retain momentum for deep penetration. Bonded bullets with jackets welded to lead cores do a much better job. So do partitioned designs like Nosler's original Partition or Swift's A-Frame. Monolithic bullets like Barnes X and Hornady GMX are effective because they have no jacket and core to separate. The all-copper alloy slugs expand thanks to a hollow nose. Hybrids like Federal's Trophy Bonded Bear Claw combine solid copper alloy shanks with nose sections filled with bonded lead. Regardless the exact design, such bullets are known collectively as controlled expansion bullets. That's what you want to ensure they'll plow through big moose muscles and bones to reach the heart, lungs or spine.
For the record, light cup-and-core bullets and even frangible varmint bullets can conclude a bull's time on Earth IF they are slipped precisely and neatly behind the shoulder and into the heart. But do you really want to have to work for that perfect shot on an expensive, once-in-a-lifetime hunt? What if your only opportunity is a bull quartering away at 300 yards? You want a bullet that'll penetrate deeply and do maximum damage.