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Nic this will be my 48 or 49th season chasing after elk, I have been at it a lot of years have been pretty successful and have a pretty substantial data base on which to base my comments. I have writtian similar responses several times in fact Scotty and OT 3 could probably write it for me. Between 1958 and 1969 I killed 13 elk with a 3006. In 1969 I killed one a long ways across a canyon by breaking three of her four legs. I was not happy with my performance and realized to hunt the country and style of hunting that I wanted to do the 06 was not enough gun. I then moved up to a 300 win mag and have never second guessed that decision. Hunting is not just killing, it is the hunters responsibity to kill the game quickly, using fair chase and to recover and utilize the meat. Now having said that I will say that if you are the type of hunter that will only shoot standing elk as did 6mm, will wait for the perfect shot and will not take the long shot the 257 passed up then the 25/06 will work for you. My closest elk has been 17 yards, my fartherst (measured) 420 and few if any of them fell where I shot them. If you want to hunt the deep dark timber, want to take the rear end shot going away, or the quartering shot with them moving, or the cross canyon shot in the trees at 300+ yards then the 25/06 won't get it done. At least the part about utilizing the meat, you probably kill them but you won't recover them frequently. There are a lot of excellent elk calibers out there, I personnaly consider the 06 class of cartridges at the minimum, with some of the better being the mediums like the 338/06, the 35 Whelen (although range is limited). The best is at least a full length 7mm caliber magnum or better. I like any thing that has a 300 associated with it, I know the .388's are stellar preformers, the 8mm and a host of others in those classifications. I know I am leaviing out some ones favorite but you are getting my point. A poorly hit elk (cow or bull) with any rifle is an elk that can go a long ways, into some of the steepest, nastiest, most rugged country on the planet leaving a little blood trail and die. Not what any ethical sportsman wants. Nuff from me.Ok i am thinking of getting a new project.. I was thinking about an X-bolt 25-06.. What do you guys think about the 25-06 for elk? Anyone have any experience with one. Thanks Nic
REDGREEN":2lq2vj7t said:If you screw up, they will find the most miserable, thickest place in the hills to expire. It will work, but there are better alternatives available for the task.
Jim1 AB":2vszen8k said:I know of only one guy that should be using a 25-06 on elk. There are others, no doubt. It takes a lot to watch an animal of your dreams just walk away because you don't have the perfect shot. I don't have that amount of time to spend hunting, yet. And to tell the truth there are just to many other fine calibers to choose from.
I agree with Pop regarding the Minimum for Elk. A 140gr premium bullet at 2700+ is the minimum I would recommend. Now if you have one tied up to a tree, a 25.06 will work fine, but under spooky wild conditions, something bigger is prudent.As that rest stated the 25-06 will work for elk. A 120 Partition at 2900-3000 fps will do the trick. Shot placement is everything. That said, I personally consider the 270 as minimum for elk.
Ain't a big enough caliber on the mountain to correct that... you hit an elk bad, and all bets are of... .25-06 or .375, doesn't matter.