Good hit, no recovery
#31
RE: Good hit, no recovery
I did the same thing two years ago, one lung hit and the deer bled steady for 100 yards. It was warm early season, so I headed out after it and jumped it. A mistake I've not made since. Adrenaline will carry a deer a long way.
#32
RE: Good hit, no recovery
ORIGINAL: silentassassin
[ I myself (especially on deer I plan to cape) bring the lungs and heart out together by reaching in and grabbing a hold of the larynx and pulling them out in tact.
[ I myself (especially on deer I plan to cape) bring the lungs and heart out together by reaching in and grabbing a hold of the larynx and pulling them out in tact.
#33
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Upstate New York
Posts: 2,435
RE: Good hit, no recovery
But, I can assure you that you aren't the only hunter intelligent to distinguish between a deers vtial organs and then determine whether or not a broadhead went through them or didn't.
#34
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Upstate New York
Posts: 2,435
RE: Good hit, no recovery
Yes, but in a sad sort of way. At first you grin or laugh, then you realize how much you really have learned, not because you're "smart" and they are "dumb", that doesn't mean a thing; but mostly because you took the time to actually learn or observe something, banked that experience in your head, and used it, while some people just trample through the woods, completely unaware of what the hel is going on around them, and take no action to figure it out.
My brother is an example of this. I love him to death, even though he only hunts2 or 3days year..[8D] But every year, the first day of gun season, he shoots a deer with his .270, it runs away, and he radios me and tells me he can't find it. I walk for a half hour to get to his spot, and spend 2 minutes tracking a deer that ran 50 yards over the hill. EVERY STINKING YEAR. Then I have to help him dress it. I can't figure out who has the flat learning curve in their brain, him for not learning anything, or me for doing all his work...[:@]
My brother is an example of this. I love him to death, even though he only hunts2 or 3days year..[8D] But every year, the first day of gun season, he shoots a deer with his .270, it runs away, and he radios me and tells me he can't find it. I walk for a half hour to get to his spot, and spend 2 minutes tracking a deer that ran 50 yards over the hill. EVERY STINKING YEAR. Then I have to help him dress it. I can't figure out who has the flat learning curve in their brain, him for not learning anything, or me for doing all his work...[:@]
#36
RE: Good hit, no recovery
Sylvan has made some good points, I think all hunters would benefit from a good anatomylesson. Another point is that topographical anatomy (where things are located in a standing deer in relation to external landmarks)is much different than a dead deer laying on its back being field dressed. Every hunter should look at theorgans andwhere they hit them, then look in the cavity of the deer andsee where the holes are and relate this back to where theentry and exit wounds are. A fewminutes with a dead deer can teach you a lot.I think the most common mistake is that the actual chest cavity ona deer is much lower than most think. Just about every shot I see on the hunting shows are borderline too high andI would guess a good number of regular bowhunters shoot high. Hence all of the I hit just above where I was aiming and the arrow only penetrated a few inches and I never found him threads. I'm in hisSylvan's campin that a good hit will put a deer down in a hurry and should never be lost.