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-   -   Shot placement (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/whitetail-deer-hunting/314898-shot-placement.html)

dkhamner 01-13-2010 01:21 PM

Shot placement
 
I am referring to rifle/muzzle loader hunters.

When shooting at deer or other four legged game, where do you try to place your shot?

I was taught as a young hunter to aim for the chest cavity (heart/lung) area but a shoulder shot none the less. Since I have been hunting for years now and have experience from trial and error, I now try for high shoulder shots on all game. I have taught my daughter this and she has tagged 4 deer now, one the last 4 years with 100% accuracy and one shot kills. I allow her to shoot deer at distances most grown men wont shoot with her longest shot being a smidge over 300 yards using her .243 and 80 grain bullets. This was a perfect placed high shoulder shot and the buck folded where he was standing.

What's ya'lls shot placement preference?

BigBuck95 01-13-2010 01:35 PM

Go for the shoulder or if you feel confident enough, the neck. Neck will drop them where they stand. I am not sure about a high shoulder shot, as I always go for the middle to low shoulder, tageting the lungs (middle) and heart (low). :fighting0007:
BigBuck95

jerry d 01-13-2010 02:44 PM

behind the shoulder for me.i also shoot a .243 & i just don't think a shoulder shot is the best option imo.

littlekid 01-13-2010 02:54 PM

Please explain "high shoulder" shot. I think I know what you mean but am unsure.
I've been taught to aim for the vitals.
That being said, I've yet to have a buck 'fold' where he's standing. One buck I shot, three years ago, was at 70 yds, straight on (directly facing me), shooting a 30-06 w/ 180 gr Federal boattails. I hit him dead center of the chest; but he was able to turn, run approx. 60 yds and bury himself under some palmettos. Myself, my mother, my father, my wife and 2 club members searched the area until 11pm with no luck (I shot him at 4:35 pm); there was absolutely no blood trail. It took my father's wolfhound to find the deer the next morning. When my father pulled the deer, by it antlers, from its 'hidey hole', all of its guts fell out of it's rearend, thus gutting was not necesary (my father opened him up and the cavity was completely gutted). You would think this shot would have 'folded' that deer easily. And this was a 140 lb. Florida deer.

cubfan56 01-13-2010 03:21 PM

shot placement
 
When using a gun I shoot deer the same place I shoot them with a bow!! thru the boiler room !! This season 3 shots , muzzloader / buck went 35 yards , bow / doe went 50 yards , rifle buck went 15 yards all shot just behind shoulder all but doe was double lung = dead deer !! just too big a target not to shoot for!

cubfan56 01-13-2010 03:22 PM

shot placement
 
When using a gun I shoot deer the same place I shoot them with a bow!! thru the boiler room !! This season 3 shots , muzzloader / buck went 35 yards , bow / doe went 50 yards , rifle buck went 15 yards all shot just behind shoulder all but doe was double lung = dead deer !! just too big a target not to shoot for!

halcon 01-13-2010 03:27 PM

Wow uhh ,top of the shoulders for me and I use a 243 win or a 25-06 . About fifty percent of the time it will hit the bottom of the backbone and put them right down .

llpaintball 01-13-2010 03:42 PM

right behind the shoulder

Daveboone 01-13-2010 03:52 PM

I aim behind the shoulder, but about 2/3rds up. I dont ruin shoulder meat, take both lungs and also cause massive shock (but not physical damage) to the spine, collapsing the deer. A bit high, spine is broken, still down and dead very quickly from the arteries just below the spine, or a bit low still through the lungs.

nchawkeye 01-13-2010 04:21 PM

Littlekid...If you'll drop down to a 150gr bullet your deer will drop faster...That 180gr bullet is harder than a 150gr plus it's going slower so it won't mushroom as quickly either...In other words, a 150 will do more damage than a 180...That's what many hunters don't realize about moving up to larger calibers...They shoot bullets that are too hard for deer and deposit the energy in the ground after it passes through the deer...In many cases the deer doesn't offer enough resistance to fully mushroom the bullet...

A high shoulder shot on a broadside deer is a bullet placed through the shoulder blade...Since the spine runs between the shoulder blades this bullet damages the spine and the deer drops...The high lung shot the first poster mentioned actually puts the bullet above the lungs but close enough to the spine to put enough shock on the deer to drop it...I've taken that shot many time with my .243, you need a bullet that opens up quickly to transfer enough shock into the ribs to drop the deer...

Where I put a bullet depends on the range and the angle of the deer...If its quartering to me I shoot them where the shoulder and neck meet...Quartering away, behind the shoulder to angle the bullet to the off side leg...Perfect broadside, just behind the shoulder and a third to half way up the body...After a few dozen deer you simply put the cross hairs where they need to be to bust the lungs and kill the deer...

Seems I remember an outdoor writer (probably Jack O'Conner) mention that you should visualize a basketball being held between the deer's front legs...What you want to do is bust that basketball...

Do that with any modern centerfire and that deer will not trave far...In fact, if they consistantly go further than 75 yards, get a softer bullet as you are drilling a hole through both lungs instead of having that bullet mushroom and making a wide wound channel...


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