RE: Whats everyones' batting average?
How do you count multiple arrows in the same animal? Does that count as one?
Nebraska turkey: 20 yards, blind
Nebraska turkey: 6 yards, flew away with arrow, not recovered, blind
Nebraska turkey: 30 yards, spot and stalk
Nebraska turkey fall: 20 yards, spot and stalk
New Zealand tahr 3 of 4 from 27 out to 50 yards, spot and stalk
New Zealand chamois 2 of 4 from 30 out to 60 yards, spot and stalk
New Zealand red deer: 40 yards, spot and stalk
New Zealand Arapawa sheep: 6 yards, spot and stalk
New Zealand turkey: 20 yards, spot and stalk
New Zealand turkey: 15 yards, spot and stalk
New Zealand Turkey: 35 yards, spot and stalk
New Zealand Feral Boar: 6 yards, spot and stalk
Texas blackbuck: 45 yards, spot and stalk
Texas blackbuck doe: 20 yards, spot and stalk
Texas aoudad: 22 yards, spot and stalk
Texas ibex: 27 yards, blind
Colorado elk: 45 yards, spot and stalk
Colorado mule deer: 54 yards, good hit-pass through-not recovered, spot and stalk
Colorado mt. goat: 38 yards, bad hit-finished with a rifle, spot and stalk
Colorado mule deer: 35 yards, spot and stalk
South Dakota whitetail buck: 35 yards, high hit-not recovered, tree stand
South Dakota whitetail buck: 20 yards, tree stand
Illinois whitetail buck: 27 yards, tree stand
Illinois whitetail doe: 20 yards, shot late in the evening, devoured by coyotes by sunup
Quebec caribou: 40 yards, spot and stalk
Quebec caribou: 20 yards, spot and stalk
Nebraska Whitetail buck: 20 yards, spot and stalk
Nebraska whitetail doe: 30 yards, good hit, not recovered, tree stand
Texas whitetail doe: miss, blind
Texas whitetail doe: 23 yards, blind
Four out of 36 arrows missed their mark, four animals were not recovered after being shot (intensive searching), and one animal was hit/recovered but finished with a rifle.
I took a fallow deer and red deer in New Zealand with a rifle