Good to hear, IvW, because the older you become the handier it gets!A illuminated dot is better than an illuminated reticle as the aiming point is all that matters ...
To your point…I will be using my Swaro Z5I scope. This is illuminated which I believe will be keyAnother thing we over think sometimes here in North America....a specific rifle scope magnification for a specific hunt....
In this case, a leopard hunt...do we need a "dangerous game scope" of say 1-6x24, or can we leave the deer hunting scope on our rifles?
For an example, my 338 WM has a 3-15x44 scope on it...and that is the rifle I want to use on my future leopard hunt...should I replace it then with a 1-6x24, a 2x or 2.5x lower power scope, or is the 3x lower power ok for the distances leopard are usually shot?
Hope to hear from the experienced leopard hunters...
Thank you for your contributions to our forum, Red Leg.Other than a very few PH's, there are few people who are "experts" at shooting leopards. But my one cat, shot with a 250 gr partition from a .338, while spending a lot of time on a cruiser and in a leopard blind with one of those real experts, Nick Nolte, has given me an opinion.In a fast .300 any relatively quick opening 180 gr bullet would be ideal. I say relatively, because too fast a bullet of too light construction can create a meaningful challenge for your taxidermist on a very expensive piece of hide. I think the 180 gr partition would be an excellent choice - and a far better option than the .375 - particularly with the 300 gr bullet. On my cat, that big partition from the .338 may still be going, so there was no recovered bullet to stare at meaningfully. However, the exit wound indicated that it had expanded a bit and likely acted like a normal SP rather than shedding its front end. That was typical on most of the antelope I took with it as well.
So were I going back for a second one, I would take my .300 WM loaded with 180 gr Accubonds, Partitions, are something similar.
I am also very interested to hear the opinions regarding the Norma Oryx...Thank you for your contributions to our forum, Red Leg.
I also prefer my 338 WM on most plains game, but haven't shot a leopard yet. However, I am planning to do so in the near future. I was thinking of using a 250 Nosler Partition for the task as well, until I read your thread...I have no intention to use any 300 mag. I hear what you say about the 250 NP, and sounds like you think it was an over kill? What do you think of using a Norma
Oryx 230 grain, a Woodleigh RN 250 grain, or maybe a 225 grain NP in the 338 WM for this application?
Hope to hear from you
I am hunting my leopard in 2025 with your wife’s exact scope. After much research I have decided to take my 275 Rigby shooting Nosler 160 Speer ballistic tipsMy wife will be using a savage 110 ultralite .308 with a Swarovski Z5i 3.5-18x44 P BT L plex-I
165 grain Accubond.
She will have her .375 for Buffalo. But we feel the .308 is the more accurate setup with less recoil. I spoke with Dalton her PH, and he says it’s the perfect set up. View attachment 562426
If she can keep her composure. She has the ability to put the pill in the center of a chosen rosette.
View attachment 562427