Ontario Hunter
AH ambassador
That's a lot of "ifs." It's why most PHs elect to wait for the animal to get up for a better shot, especially thick skinned big boned animals that want to kill me.If you're a good shot, have a reasonable understanding of buffalo anatomy and what laying down might do to organ placement, have a steady rest, and your PH will allow you to take the shot, etc., then I don't think a shot would be unethical.
Having said that, if you decide to take that shot, I would suggest you reload immediately and take a follow up shot, or allow your PH to take one if it looks like your first shot didn't hit the mark. If you have a double, well, that's what that second barrel is for.
I was in the same situation some years ago, on the biggest buffalo I'd seen to that point (and since, as it turns out). We had a comfortable place to rest, so we gave it some time and he eventually got up on his own. But if we had been losing light . . . and if we had battled to find a shootable bull . . . I don't think we'd have waited.
My PH won't let me shoot at buffalo, or anything else, in waning light. Certainly not an "iffy" shot. I might do it hunting deer and elk in snow because I can track down a wounded one. Still, it nearly cost me injury or death when the last elk came for me point blank in the dark. Tracking a wounded bull buffalo in the dark "just is not done" according to my PH. Obviously, an animal that size in that environment will spoil if it dies and is not dressed in an hour or two. Yeah, I might still have the horns and a story to tell. But the story will have a shitty ending if the animal suffered to death during the night and meat went to the vultures. Not the kind of memories I want to look at on the wall. Would rather fly home with nothing ... but good memories. I'm pleased my PH is cut from the same cloth.
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