I suppose they're called "cocktail cartridges" because they're part of an on-going game we all induldge in around the campfire or in the comfort of our homes... drinks in-hand. A sort of "mental-gymnastics" exercise. I'm not sure why some of us play this game. While I don't take the game to its extreme (i.e., 223's on elk), I'll admit I'm as guilty as the next guy. Is this some sort of Ludite or Puritan throwback... a "less is more" sort of thing? A depression-era hold-on? An imposed economy due to financial limitations, or just plain-old ego?
I'm not really sure. Around this part of the world it's not a game as much as it's a reality. For example, many in these parts think of a 338 Win Mag as an "elephant gun" while you'll get approving nods if you use a 270 for everything.
Now I'm not knocking the 270... heck, I think everyone should own one. Coupled with a 338 Win Mag I doubt there's a finer pair for all North American game. But we dither about a cartridge that holds ten or twelve extra grains of powder as if that were some wasteful extravagance. We opine that a lesser cartridge is up to 95% of the tasks of its larger competitor (the 7-08 vs 270 for example... name your pair). What we often loose sight of in this excercise is that 5% (or whatever fraction) still involves the death of a living creature. Cartridge minutia and reloading economy really shouldn't enter into the equasion. How many cents extra are we really blowing out the barrel?
Obviously this premise can be taken to an exterme. I'm not advocating we all use 416 Weatherby's for elk and 340's for deer and pronghorn. New "wonder bullets" have made marginal cartridges much more effective. On the other hand, those same "wonder bullets" have made entirely adequate cartridges more than adequate!
I guess the bottom-line in all this is we should use the biggest cartidge (for the quarry we seek) that we can precisely shoot... to heck with the notion of "overkill." If we can't shoot a cartridge that will dispatch our quarry humanely under less than ideal conditons then perhaps we shouldn't hunt that animal... or hold our fire for a "perfect" opportunity.
What got me thinking about all this is that my twelve year old daughter informed me this past Sunday that she wants to take hunter's ed this year and start hunting. Of course I'm absolutly thrilled, but was caught off-guard as she'd not given me any indiction this was even a remote possibility... girls! Being my daughter she wants to tackle elk straight off! Only problem is, I doubt she can handle more than a 243. We'll go for pronghorn and deer first... the elk (with a 308 or 270) will have to wait!
Brad
[This message has been edited by Brad (edited 03-15-2002).]
"GET TO THE HILL"
Dog
But to your hunting topic....... I remember in the old days, lots of the prominent gunwriters loved to play a sort of "how low can you go" game out of cartridge selection. They were always sighting the time Ol' So&So whacked the biggest and toughest critters on Earth with .270s, 7mm Mausers, and .257s, and with fabulous killing results. When I was fifteen years-old, I thought that rational was stylish wisdom at its finest, but today, I think that sort of rational is ridiculous.
But I suppose I was a lot smarter thirty years ago than I am today. I believe in using plenty of gun for the game at hand - period - and I really don't give a hoot what sort of small cartridge has been used (you never heard about any failures for some odd reason!) on big moose, big bears, or even elephants by some old timer from fifty years ago.
AD
Allen, you're probably correct that this "game" was inveneted by gunwriters... they've certainly found a willing audience! Like you, the older I get the more I like to see the stuff I shoot get truly "smacked"... no sense fooling around!
Year-before-last I watched a perfectly placed 100 grain 6mm go broadside into the lungs of a big cow elk at 200 yards... she led us on a merry chase, and was finally anchored with a 7mm Wby and Nosler Partitions. In the timber that old-gal would have been lost. I'd be willing to bet a 270, 30-06 or even better, a 300 or 338, would have put her down much quicker.
Brad
In the case of your daughter, are you sure you don't just want to start with deer and other smaller game first, that can be taken with a 243 and work you way up to elk as she becomes more proficient and can handle a larger firearm? Nothing could be worse for your daughter than if she wounded an animal and it ran off without being recovered. You would not be training her to be a responsible hunter.
[This message has been edited by rockhead (edited 03-16-2002).]
The curiosity of these "cocktail cartridges" is very interesting indeed.
There are many complex angles to this notion, and each distorts and twists the real issue. Individual recoil limits are not the full story. Shot to shot economy is merely a smoke screen. Yet, all the while ethics never seem to be abandoned, no, they are always held in the most sincere regard.
So, what are we to make of it all? What is the motivation behind all this?
When I distill these considerations, I find what is at the heart of your question. I find the heart of the hunter. You see, deep down we all know that life is a very fragile thing. So fragile, that our distant ancestors were reasonably successful harvesting animals with mere sticks and stones. And we in turn, wonder if we could do the same. Do we really have what it takes? I'm convinced this base urge to simplify (and even to prove ones skill, dicipline, and prowess themselves) is what leads people to hunt with handgun, muzzleloader, and bow. All of which are equally deadly in their own right. When this personal renniassance takes place-- in thought or action-- we see that killing does not truely motivate the hunter. Rather, it's the experience and the hunt itself.
Anyway, these are just a few of my meanderings on this thread. It's a real thinking-mans topic. Thanks Brad!
Rockhead, if you read my post, I never said I was taking my daughter after elk with a large rifle... I said I'd start her on deer and antelope first with a 243. She's not ready for elk hunting in the mountains yet. I can't wait until she is ready though!
BigNate... I totally agree. I've never thought deer take all that much killing. I've taken them with 250 Savages and Roberts' on-up. They're thin-skinned, light bones little critters. I'm always amazed at the amount of hand-wringinging over deer cartridges! I DO think, however, that in the west it doesn't get much better than the 270 for deer.
Elk are a different matter. I think the 338 Win Mag is about the best elk round to come down the pike. I've used it with great success... and no, I don't have a hairy chest! The reason I like it is because it's exactly the kind of round I'm talking about. It's a cartridge for less than ideal situations on big, tenacious critters. I think anyone who's accustomed to shooting a 30-06 can learn to handle a 338 Win Mag if it has a soft recoil pad on a stock that will mitigate recoil.
Waldog, I agree... it is a "thinking man's" subject!
Regards all,
Brad
Then there is the matter of shooting distance. As Atkinson has pointed out "at some range every .300 magnum becomes a 30/06!" This means that a small person can shoot a .308W up to 200 yards and it will hit just as well as a .300 mangelem at 400 yards.
As to the cocktail cartridge topic. I think it's a poor plan. You don't want to drive over a bridge that is made to the 2 ton weight of you truck do you? Bridges are made to take 6 or more times the load. They may be rated low but they will do a lot more!
You may have a shot with a animal quartering towards you and find to your dismay that it was not quartering towards you but instead looking back over it's shoulder!
Use enough gun.
I know you intend to start on smaller game. I did not mean to be critical, I just wanted reinforce that she progresses gradually to bigger game as she becomes more proficient and capable of shooting appropriate calibers. This is the same approach I will take with my two daughters
I think that it is excellent that your daughter wants to hunt with you. I an envious, You are fortunate, I am still several years away from hunting with my children.
[This message has been edited by rockhead (edited 03-16-2002).]
"GET TO THE HILL AND TAKE YOUR KIDS WITH YOU"
Dog
What a masterpiece photograph!
I can only imagine the memories that lie behind this day in the woods...
I suspect that 20 years from now, the biggest trophy on your wall will have less value than this one photo.
Congratulations on your darling girls.
I wish I could go back 15 years and take my son hunting more. But I'll try to make up for it this June in Zimbabwe.
Rick.
Good luck in Zim, I am sure it will produce wonderful memories for you and your son. My best hunting memories are those involving my father.