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Hunting & Fishing .260, Crow, 615 yards

coldboremiracle

Freelance Sharpshooter
Full Member
Minuteman
  • Jul 7, 2009
    5,237
    1,131
    Utah, north
    www.coldboremiracle.com
    So I went out to the desert this morning, looking for rabbits and hopefully a coyote. I went to a spot where I had seen em before, hoping for a sighting. It was cold, sub zero, but sunny and beautiful. I was laying there in the snow for about fifteen minutes, not having seen much, I heard a crow calling out in the valley beyond. I looked and saw him land on a wooden power pole. I ranged it with my Swarovsky at 615yds, but it looked much further.
    Ballistic told me 3.8 MIL's up, and as I looked at the crow squawking from the tip of the pole, I could see a slight left to right wind in the mirage. So after dialing in my elevation, I held left side of the bird, and as he hunched over and let out his final sound, I pressed on the ice cold trigger on my SRS. The dead cold silence was broken by the sound of my 140 Amax spinning through the cold dry air, the snow was so cold it wouldn't stick to itself, like super light sand, I had sunk down into it giving me a rock solid rest, and when the shot broke, nothing moved. I lay there, still as the snow around me watching for the bullet, but the trace was invisible. Right at the moment I was expecting to see the crow duck and fly away, my bullet found its mark. Impact was right between his shoulders, the violent impact sent feathers flying. And his lifeless body tipped and fell the long way to the ground. As I watched, stunned by the perfect cold bore shot, the sound of the impact made its way back to my awaiting ears. It sounded like a golf club striking a ripe tomato, it was beautiful.

    Here are some pics:

    C62B1F35.jpg

    A2A76D19.jpg

     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    Hell of a story. Sounds familiar to my last kill, minus the snow and exactly 200 less yards on a trotting coyote moving into a 3-5mph wind. Southwest 175 SMK in 308 for mine. Had to get a skull mount.

    Congratulations man, nice shot.
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    I'd say Tip to Tip wing span would be a good way to judge lol
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    Great write up & a hell of a shot. Especially cold bore freezing your ass off
    laugh.gif


    I'd have to say crow score has got to be based on beak measurements.


    t
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    Hate to be the party pooper, but food for thought,

    Around here shooting at any type of infrastructure (light pole, power pole, pipeline, cell tower, etc) can result in both criminal and civil action. Does not matter if you are shooting at the actual equipment, or just in the direction of it.

    A group of shooters were using the cleared area under a high tension power transmission line, and the closest neighbor called the local PD and Power Company. The Officer got there first and was trying to tell them they needed to move on when a Power Company Rep showed up. The PC Rep advised the Officer he wanted the individuals charged for Criminal Trespassing and Criminal Mischief, along with a list of other crimes. The Officer advised that he felt the situation could be handled with a verbal warning, to which the PC Rep advised he would be filling a formal complaint with the Dept if they were not formally charged. The Officer called his Supervisor for guidance, and he advised the PC Rep was within his legal rights to make the request, and they should be charged, then the courts could sort it out. Ultimately those individuals were found guilty of a number of charges and were hit with fines and community service. They were also sued civilly and had to pay damages to the Power Company.

    Back story to all of it, some shooters had been shooting along the power lines and were causing damage to the equipment, some of which resulted in significant power outages and repair bills. As such the Power Company has a Zero Tolerance, 100% Enforcement Policy, towards anyone they catch shooting on their property / right of ways, or in the direction of their equipment.

    Obviously in some parts of the country, this would not be an issue. In other locations, it can obviously be a very big issue if you get caught up in it!

    Best of Luck,
    M Richardson
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: captrichardson</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Hate to be the party pooper, but food for thought,

    Around here shooting at any type of infrastructure (light pole, power pole, pipeline, cell tower, etc) can result in both criminal and civil action. Does not matter if you are shooting at the actual equipment, or just in the direction of it.

    A group of shooters were using the cleared area under a high tension power transmission line, and the closest neighbor called the local PD and Power Company. The Officer got there first and was trying to tell them they needed to move on when a Power Company Rep showed up. The PC Rep advised the Officer he wanted the individuals charged for Criminal Trespassing and Criminal Mischief, along with a list of other crimes. The Officer advised that he felt the situation could be handled with a verbal warning, to which the PC Rep advised he would be filling a formal complaint with the Dept if they were not formally charged. The Officer called his Supervisor for guidance, and he advised the PC Rep was within his legal rights to make the request, and they should be charged, then the courts could sort it out. Ultimately those individuals were found guilty of a number of charges and were hit with fines and community service. They were also sued civilly and had to pay damages to the Power Company.

    Back story to all of it, some shooters had been shooting along the power lines and were causing damage to the equipment, some of which resulted in significant power outages and repair bills. As such the Power Company has a Zero Tolerance, 100% Enforcement Policy, towards anyone they catch shooting on their property / right of ways, or in the direction of their equipment.

    Obviously in some parts of the country, this would not be an issue. In other locations, it can obviously be a very big issue if you get caught up in it!

    Best of Luck,
    M Richardson </div></div>

    Christ mike....way to ruin a good crow kill thread. It's still the Wild West for a reason. It's really only gay like that around here.
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    Shooting at power lines is a big NO NO thanks to the Patriot Act.

    Nice story, nice shot.
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    To all the poopooer's, it probably doesn't matter but I believe the power poles are either abandoned or out of service, half of the cables and insulators have fallen to the ground, and broken.
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    Hey CBM,

    Awesome shot and set up...to include the story. just noticed you're shooting a gasser! even sweeter!

    I just got final word back from my boys in Norway... they're scared shitless to bring some of the norma plastic point bullets back with them. So, I can't get ahold of any to split up with you for subsonic performance testing. sucks.

    Cheers,
    breeze
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    Nice shot and story as always. Reminded me of the crow I shot when I was 16, he was 300+ one shot over the hood of the truck with my 30-06. Started my long range love.
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    Nice story. Pretty impressive for a cold bore shot, no doubt about it.
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    <div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: ColdBoreMiracle</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> half of the cables and insulators have fallen to the ground, and broken.</div></div>

    Fallen....or shot down?
    laugh.gif
    lol, just kidding.

    Great write up, wish I was there for the whole thing, but the story was damn near just as good.
     
    Re: .260, Crow, 615 yards

    forget infrastructure and the patriot act....did you check the area for hidden hikers or stray dogs!
    nice shot.
     
    Heck of a shot!
    Quick question! I'm going in circles trying to understand mil dots and moa adjustment's. I keep reading contradicting explanations on the internet so I figure now is a good time for someone to help set me straight.
    He said that at 615 yards he adjusted 3.8 mils for elevation. According to a chart I found on here, 1 mil @ 600 yards is 21.6". Now 3.8 mils up or (3.8 x 21.6") is about 83 inches... this has greatly confused me. Either his bullet has considerable drop... or I'm a dumbass going in circles on the web trying to figure this seemingly basic problem out... please help me guys!!!
     
    You did figure out the basic problem already.

    One mil at 100 yards is 3.6".

    3.6" x 6 = 21.6".

    3.8 Mils at 21.6" per Mil is 82.08"

    The dope for my .260 in warm weather is 3.6 Mils, so coldboremiracle is shooting almost the same trajectory as I am. There is no such thing as "flat shooting". Also, realize, that doesn't mean the bullet arches that high above the target, that's just your point of aim above the target. POI and Max Ordinate are two different things.
     
    Originally Posted By: captrichardson
    Hate to be the party pooper, but food for thought,

    Around here shooting at any type of infrastructure (light pole, power pole, pipeline, cell tower, etc) can result in both criminal and civil action. Does not matter if you are shooting at the actual equipment, or just in the direction of it.

    A group of shooters were using the cleared area under a high tension power transmission line, and the closest neighbor called the local PD and Power Company. The Officer got there first and was trying to tell them they needed to move on when a Power Company Rep showed up. The PC Rep advised the Officer he wanted the individuals charged for Criminal Trespassing and Criminal Mischief, along with a list of other crimes. The Officer advised that he felt the situation could be handled with a verbal warning, to which the PC Rep advised he would be filling a formal complaint with the Dept if they were not formally charged. The Officer called his Supervisor for guidance, and he advised the PC Rep was within his legal rights to make the request, and they should be charged, then the courts could sort it out. Ultimately those individuals were found guilty of a number of charges and were hit with fines and community service. They were also sued civilly and had to pay damages to the Power Company.

    Back story to all of it, some shooters had been shooting along the power lines and were causing damage to the equipment, some of which resulted in significant power outages and repair bills. As such the Power Company has a Zero Tolerance, 100% Enforcement Policy, towards anyone they catch shooting on their property / right of ways, or in the direction of their equipment.

    Obviously in some parts of the country, this would not be an issue. In other locations, it can obviously be a very big issue if you get caught up in it!

    Best of Luck,
    M Richardson



    Christ mike....way to ruin a good crow kill thread. It's still the Wild West for a reason. It's really only gay like that around here.

    That's all he is good at is sticking his nose in a perfectly good thread! Out in the middle of God's country and he wants to talk about power lines. Haha, that is trivial at best.
     
    You did figure out the basic problem already.

    One mil at 100 yards is 3.6".

    3.6" x 6 = 21.6".

    3.8 Mils at 21.6" per Mil is 82.08"

    The dope for my .260 in warm weather is 3.6 Mils, so coldboremiracle is shooting almost the same trajectory as I am. There is no such thing as "flat shooting". Also, realize, that doesn't mean the bullet arches that high above the target, that's just your point of aim above the target. POI and Max Ordinate are two different things.

    Thank you. I was right from the beginning. I read some dumbass article that screwed me. The only reason I was so unsure is because 82" seemed like too much. I'm good now though so thank you.
     
    hell of a nice shot, got me a crow once while hunting coyotes on private land without power lines or hikers but lots of turkeys. damn bird landed stright in front of me at 489 yds and I pit it down with a 7STW. it was all quiet after wards.
     
    my dad shot a crow with his 204 at about 60 yards and it basically exploded but with a 260 at 615 well that must have been quite the firework show
     
    I lobe shooting crow, reminds me of a few years ago when i cold bore shot one right at 300 yds with my 17rem. Most memorable cause my buddy asked if i thought i could hit it and dead centered that crow. 25 grn vmax at 4000fps is sweet, wish youd posted the after shot tho.