IMHO, hunting has nothing to do with the distance of the shot, or even taking a shot for that matter. I go hunting all of the time, without ever taking a shot. Hunting is scouting, locating the game, being in the
animals home element, trying to figure what the animal is going to do and why. Then if you choose to take the animal, you are shooting it, whether it's at 5 yds or 500 yds. When you take an animal and call your buddies, do you tell them "I
hunted a good buck today"? No, you say "I
shot a good buck today."
It is an endless (and pointless, really) debate about how far is too far, blah blah blah. You should not shoot further than your skill. Period. Most of us realize that, but there are also many that do not. I can hit clay pigeons or pop cans at 200 yds with any rifle I have, be it a .22 mag, a 30-30, a muzzleloader, or a 30-06. I can hit those targets at 400 yds with my 30-06 or something similar. Would I shoot at a deer 250 yds away with my in-line? Yes, without any "morality or ethics" issue on my part. Would most other people? Probably not.
This topic started about animals shot or wounded at long range, and now it's about poor shots at close range?? Where's the happy medium going to be? Shoot whatever ranges you are comfortable with. If others don't agree, so what? If you know you can kill a deer at 500 yds, be my guest. I've read numerous times that you shouldn't shoot unless you are 100% sure of a clean, killing hit on the animal. How can you ever be 100% sure of anything? Are you 100% sure that your bullet isn't a defect? Are you 100% sure that your scope didn't break on that last shot at the range? No, you aren't. Regardless of your skill level, you are always taking something for granted when you're out in the field. It might be your equipment, your ability, etc. Murphy's Law is the rule for anything. I watched a deer take a 165 grain Partition from a .300 Weatherby, the shot was quartering toward the shooter, aimed for the front of the shoulder, and the bullet passed through and out the other side. Distance was about 60 yds. You know what? That shot didn't kill that deer. It was killed a year later by the hunter's brother. We know it's the same deer because it had a bad eye and a torn ear. You could see where the inital shot entered, and you could see the scar on the rear leg where it exited. How in the world did that shot not kill the deer? Beats the hell out of me, and I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't been there. I would have called that shot 100%, and so would everyone else.
We should all be glad that there are people of all skill levels that want to hunt and shoot. That way, the tradition keeps going, even if some of them use bad judgement. Regardless of the topic, there is someone that will make a bad decision. For example, there are many many more people that use bad judgement or go beyond their skill level everyday while they are behind the wheel of the car than there ever will be in the hunting fields. I don't see anybody on the soapbox talking about things like that.............
I think it's time to let it go........for now.