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I got my bear back and it's just barely able to be measured a half an inch back and I'd have lost some valuable width. I have to wait 60 days to get it measured but my taxidermist put it at 20" 1/8th.
Shot placement was through right the eye.
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Do you have a photo with the bear? I'd love to compare scull size with the whole bear
I used a 165 grain Nosler Accubond. I am pleased with the setup both from a trajectory and terminal ballistics standpoint.Glad it worked out for you. I never trust my own marksmanship to attempt a head shot, though my shots tend to be more than accurate enough, I always fear the one time it isn't.
What kind of bullet did you use?
Nice to see that you're using hearing protection. Too many hunters don't. Last week at camp, I even offered a spare pair to the other hunter, but he refused and told me to "man up".
this is one of my biggest concerns with head shots. moreso, I don't want a maimed deer stumbling around the woods for 2 months before dying. with my luck, I'd have this happenBullet from head shot deflected and struck his twin in the lungs.
Well, I think the probability of wounding a deer with a head shot is relatively slim. This buck would not have lived very long ... as in minutes maybe. I was actually stunned that it could get back up. A surprising number of deer are lost every year after being shot "in the boiler room" with a rifle (many more similarly hit with an arrow). But very few deer or elk shot in the head go anywhere but on the ground instantly. They are either dead on the spot or missed altogether. Not bad choices, especially if your a deer.this is one of my biggest concerns with head shots. moreso, I don't want a seriously maimed deer stumbling around the woods for 2 months before succumbing in January to starvation.
You’ve never seen deer or elk with their jaws shot off? I certainly have.Well, I think the probability of wounding a deer with a head shot is relatively slim. This buck would not have lived very long ... as in minutes maybe. I was actually stunned that it could get back up. A surprising number of deer are lost every year after being shot "in the boiler room" with a rifle (many more similarly hit with an arrow). But very few deer or elk shot in the head go anywhere but on the ground instantly. They are either dead on the spot or missed altogether. Not bad choices, especially if your a deer.
The first elk I tracked at age 12 was one a logging truck driver had shot in the jaw. Another logger got it a few days later. The first guy would have got it if he hadn't left his gun in the truck when he approached it laying in the road. Never personally saw it or any other animal shot in the jaw.You’ve never seen deer or elk with their jaws shot off? I certainly have.