CoElkHunter
AH ambassador
I love the story here of shooting at water thieves. I often thought about shooting at the ground near beer thieves, but most were friends/acquaintances and they might shoot back. I have an old cooler that creaks real loud when someone opens it, so that kinda preempts having to resort to wasting precious bullets.One of the famous conservationists, whether is was Kevin Robertson, Ivan Carter or another one had a story about a poacher that had developed the skill to put a .22 short into an artery just behind the front leg of an elephant as it took a step. The artery was just under the skin as a .22 cant reach anything vital in an animal the size of an elephant. Anyway, they would then follow the elephant, which probably didnt even realize it was wounded, until it passed out and died of blood loss. Yet another example of "better than a pointy stick", but not by much.
People often point to WDM bell and incorrectly assume that he stopped charges with a 6.5 MS. Fortunately he wasnt stupid. He didnt use the 6.5 because he thought it was the best elephant gun, he used it because he was in the ivory business and he was minimizing his business overhead. Even then, a double rifle cost probably 10-20x what a bolt action MS rifle cost and the ammunition was plentiful and cheap unlike .416 Rigby ammo. He also owned big bore and medium bore rifles. And I think people underestimate his superhuman offhand marksmanship skills and his ice cool temperment in an elephant herd. There is the story of him sending some water thieves into the hills by shooting one of their shovel handles in half and keeping them running by skipping bullets around their feet, all without hitting them, out past a few hundred yards... with a mauser broomhandle pistol.
Lets keep WDM Bell out of the .45-70 for elephant argument, because no one today has the life experience or lived in the same Africa he did. He isnt a good example any more than superman is a good example of not needing hydraulics.