
45-70, 1886 takes a huge Nilgai
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45-70, 1886 takes a huge Nilgai
For the past few weeks there have been a bunch of Nilgai running on and off low fence neighbors of ours. We opened our gates at night in the front, then in the morning closed the front and opened the back gates. After a week, sure enough we spotted Nilgai on the ranch. We thought there were four of them. I hunted two days and kept seeing two cows but I got a glimpse of two bulls together. Late on the second day, I spotted one bull at a water hole. I snuck up to 100 yards and he started leaving. I back-tracked to cut him off and waited. About 15 minutes later the bull appeared 70 yards out following a trail through the brush. I put the crosshairs on him and squeezed the trigger sending a 405 grain Kodiak bullet 2000 fps though the air. The bullet penetrated the top of the heart and clipped lungs, exiting through a hole all of an inch round. The bull walked about 50 feet and fell dead. Richard told me he has taken about 300 Nilgai with clients in his career and only a handful died with one shot. He also said it is extremely rare to get full penetration. (Exit hole visible in the photo) The bull ended up making the record books and being a 9 year old black caped animal that weighed 528 pounds. Truly a monster among Nilgai. Over the next two days we saw two more bulls and let a client shoot one. His was 326 pounds and grey and blue coated with around 7 1/2 inch horns (for comparison).


- Ysabel Kid
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Gotta love that 86!!!
Kind regards,
Tycer
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Nice animal. I hope it eats good, that's a lot of meat on those hooves.86er wrote:Same old Win/Miroku that I always use. I put a custom scope mount, sling swivels, kick-eeze pad, firesight front and Lyman 66 rear. It is the high-grade model though.
How about a closeup of your firesight? I'm interested in how you installed it. My Browning has the old Winchester square block with a blade pinned into it. I don't know how that block is attached, is it soldered?
Thanks
Grizz
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Congratulations and glad that worked out for you.
Later, lets hear how the rest of the weekend hunt went.
Later, lets hear how the rest of the weekend hunt went.
CRS, NRA Benefactor Member, TSRA, DRSS, DWWC, Whittington Center
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Very nice. Keep these posts coming and you are keeping everyones interest up to go to Hondo and hunt with you and Richard M. It was fun in February when I went, and now my wife is bugging me to find time to take her.
D. Brian Casady
Quid Llatine Dictum Sit, Altum Viditur.
Advanced is being able to do the basics while your leg is on fire---Bill Jeans
Don't ever take a fence down until you know why it was put up---Robert Frost
Quid Llatine Dictum Sit, Altum Viditur.
Advanced is being able to do the basics while your leg is on fire---Bill Jeans
Don't ever take a fence down until you know why it was put up---Robert Frost
Beautiful animal,
Beautiful gun, great cartridge!
Good on 'ya!
-Shannon
Good on 'ya!
-Shannon
The scope mount is a Wild West Guns that I machined out to fit my barrel contour.
The meat is the best antelope meat there is. A close second would be Oryx. The short story is that the Railroad companies did not want to feed the oriental workers prime beef so they imported the meat native to their country. Thinking it was sub-par to beef the RR owners thought they had a cheap alternative for feeding the oriental workers. They tried to contain them in round pens and makeshift corrals. The Nilgai jumped over, broke through and pushed open the barriers and escaped. The remnants of the original herds are predominantly on the King Ranch. These probably wandered out from King (about an hour from us). They are now free range in the coastal counties, and some of the western areas of TX.
If anyone wants to shoot one I'd provide a full hunt for a cow Nilgai with no kill, no pay guarantee for $850. In other words, there is no guarantee that we can get one but I won't charge you anything unless you do. There are at least 3 or 4 more on the ranch right now.
The size is typically 400 something pounds for males and the largest horns recorded are 11 6/8". This one is 528 pounds and the horns are 10 and change. Less mature bulls are greyish blue and are commonly called Blue Bulls. Since the hair is translucent, the sunlight penetrating the grey fibers creates a blue hue. Older bulls are dark like the one I shot. Cows are a redish tan color and do not sport horns. They grow up to 400 pounds.
The meat is the best antelope meat there is. A close second would be Oryx. The short story is that the Railroad companies did not want to feed the oriental workers prime beef so they imported the meat native to their country. Thinking it was sub-par to beef the RR owners thought they had a cheap alternative for feeding the oriental workers. They tried to contain them in round pens and makeshift corrals. The Nilgai jumped over, broke through and pushed open the barriers and escaped. The remnants of the original herds are predominantly on the King Ranch. These probably wandered out from King (about an hour from us). They are now free range in the coastal counties, and some of the western areas of TX.
If anyone wants to shoot one I'd provide a full hunt for a cow Nilgai with no kill, no pay guarantee for $850. In other words, there is no guarantee that we can get one but I won't charge you anything unless you do. There are at least 3 or 4 more on the ranch right now.
The size is typically 400 something pounds for males and the largest horns recorded are 11 6/8". This one is 528 pounds and the horns are 10 and change. Less mature bulls are greyish blue and are commonly called Blue Bulls. Since the hair is translucent, the sunlight penetrating the grey fibers creates a blue hue. Older bulls are dark like the one I shot. Cows are a redish tan color and do not sport horns. They grow up to 400 pounds.
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Hello 86er,where about is that Ranch located at in hondo,who is Richard M.,would It happen to be Richard Munneich I'm sorry if i butchered the last name i mean no disrespect,but i've only heard the name mentioned that this fellow had a nice exotic game ranch.I heard it from a co-worker who used to do some skinning for a Richard Munneich if it is the same person.
"ONE SHOT,ONE KILL"