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Is this suitable for shooting a croc?

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30 July 2015, 01:59
Tim Herald
Is this suitable for shooting a croc?
I have only ever shot a croc with a .416Rem., and he was a monster. I am going to Kambako's Moz camp next week and a croc tag was available, so I have it. I already had all my gun paperwork done, so I can't change things up. I am taking my .470 Double for buff and a .300 bolt gun for leopard and PG. I am shooting 180 grain Accubonds out of the .300. Is that sufficient to kill a croc, I prefer the shot behind the smile? I have shot a whole lot of animals with that load all over the world, but knowing I am needing to break some good sized bones, I am a little concerned. The crocs up there are not huge, so we are probably looking at a 12 footer. What do you experienced croc guys think of this combo for a croc?


Good Hunting,

Tim Herald
Worldwide Trophy Adventures
tim@trophyadventures.com
30 July 2015, 02:33
Dave Fulson
Tim
.300 is plenty. Have seen a ton of crocs killed with it. My croc go to bullet is the Hornady GMX especially on the neck shot. Deadly. But you have plenty of rifle to get it done. Good luck.


Dave Fulson
30 July 2015, 02:35
larryshores
Yes, it will definitely work.
30 July 2015, 03:09
Tim Herald
Coming from you two I feel confident. I wasn't worried about caliber as much as bullet but the Accubond is a very good bullet.


Good Hunting,

Tim Herald
Worldwide Trophy Adventures
tim@trophyadventures.com
30 July 2015, 04:08
Use Enough Gun
Yes sir, it will work. tu2
30 July 2015, 06:40
Jason P
.30 cal worked fine for me
30 July 2015, 08:50
Saeed
More than enough.

I will be happy to shoot a croc with a 223 and have absolutely no worry about it.


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30 July 2015, 17:49
Indy
I killed my 14 footer with a .300 Weatherby and 180 grain Nosler Partition. Although the croc died instantly, the bullet did not exit. My pH said that soft points almost never exit from a shot behind the smile.

If I ever did this again, I might use a .375. but for crocs, accuracy is more important than power.


Indy

Life is short. Hunt hard.
31 July 2015, 00:00
jdollar
i killed a 14' with a 30-06 and a 15' with a 300 win mag- both in Moz. no problem at all.


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31 July 2015, 01:37
LionHunter
Yes. I too used a .300wm for my Selous Croc in 2001, shooting a Swift A-Frame 180 gr bullet. Proper POI is more important on Croc than caliber or bullet. Beau took his big lizard last year with a 458B&M shooting the CEB solid - DRT.


Mike
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31 July 2015, 09:23
lavaca
Been counting on my .30-06. Glad to hear I'm not totally full of shit.
11 August 2015, 04:09
retreever
Tim accurate shooting is much more important then. Shoot him in the neck then break hips his pushing legs.

Mike


Michael Podwika... DRSS bigbores and hunting www.pvt.co.za " MAKE THE SHOT " 450#2 Famars
11 August 2015, 04:43
Bill73
My buddy shot his croc with his 470,one shot one dead croc Big Grin


DRSS
11 August 2015, 04:44
Rule 303
For croc 308 min and it is plenty. I have never shot a croc but have been with blokes that have and they found 223 marginal unless close. These blokes were culling problem croc's in the Solomon Islands.
11 August 2015, 08:18
lavaca
Glad to hear a .30-06 is ample, as I suspected. I'll still probably use the .416.
11 August 2015, 14:09
Caracal
quote:
Originally posted by Indy:


If I ever did this again, I might use a .375. but for crocs, accuracy is more important than power.

Yes, you could probably kill a croc with (almost) any caliber if you are accourate and manage to reach the brain.


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11 August 2015, 18:54
Brice
Caracal is absolutely correct. PRECISE shot placement is all. Any PG caliber and bullet is sufficient. Going for the brain is like hitting a golf ball, maybe at over 100 yards, in field conditions. If Mr. Croc is close to the water, being off an inch can mean losing the trophy. I used my 375 in Zambia because it is a tack driver. Prepare yourself mentally for the shot. Prone in the sand is a great position.