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Old 11-30-2007 | 10:09 PM
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TFOX
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Joined: Feb 2003
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From: HENDERSON KY USA
Default RE: Stopping Deer

ORIGINAL: BigJ71

This time of the year is great (obviously) for reading about hunting stories and such. One thing I've noticed though is a lot of hunters will call out to deer to get them to stop so they can shoot them usually with a "maaa" or something of the sort.

While I have done this myself on more than one occasion, I only do it if the deer is on a good pace and I don't think I can make a clean shot. If the deer in just slowly walking I won't make a sound and I will shoot them mid stride or when they stop to browse or what have you.

I've actually been studying this for some time and there is areason why. I have found that approximately 90% of the deer I shot that I had to call to stop have ran out of sight, most of them pretty far (over 100yds) before dying.

Conversely, approximately 90% of the deer I shotwithout making any sound,fall within sight (under 50yds). Most of the time they will react to the impact and run for a bit then stop or continue walking until they fell over just as my deer did this year.

I believe the deer that hear your mouth call, stop to look to see where the sound is coming from and automatically go on alert. I think they know what they heard just wasn't quite right and are ready to bolt but being curious animals they hesitate. When they get hit by an arrow they now KNOW something is wrong, instinct kicks in and they flee.

If they don't hear a sound, and are not on alert,all they can compute is a sudden pain. They react to it but then calm down quickly. Nature is a rough customer and deer get injured a lot. Deer don't have the brain capacity to compute things like us and can't reason out what just happened. This is why (IMO) the deer have reacted the way they do.

I've been studying this for many years now...it just takes time to gather the data.

Just thought I'd share my findings....opinions anyone?
I just saw this thread and have not read all the responses but there is alot of truth in your assumptions imo.


I HATE to stop deer but when hunting thickets with small shooting windows,it is a necessary evil but please remember that when stopping a deer,SHOOT LOW as I forgot to do so this year and it cost me a deer.I had everything pegged on this deer but I HAD to stop it in a lane but she looked at me when I did and I forgot to shoot low,she ducked to bolt and I missed.(only time I have ever had this happen and I have missed before)


I have killed deer as far out as 34 yards walking and didn't stop them and you just have quicker recoveries if you can do it that way.


Shooting a walking deer is not hard at all,the biggest mistake people make is trying to time the release.Get on the animal with the pin and rotate at the hips with the animals stride and just squeeze the shot off as you rotate.Follow through as if you are shooting a shotgun and more often than not,the animal will be killed quickly.
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