Stay Sharp
Well-known member
Im fortunate to be able to take a lot of archery game animals and for years I did custom butchering (started doing it as a kid back on the farm with my father) so Ive disassembled a lot of deer love several decades. The stuff I find in them in amazing and yet they show no outward sign of injury.
This deer was harvested with a bow a Friend in South Eastern Wisconsin. He made a great hit and the deer piled up inside of 50 yards.
He brought to deer to me for processing. I skinned it for a shoulder mount, stopping right behind the ears.
The buck dressed out at 175 pounds and has a good layer of fat on it’s rump. Every indication was that this was a normal, healthy deer. I returned the head to my friend for mounting. After the taxidermist capped the skull, he cut the skull plate to remove the antlers. As he finished the cut, he hit metal. My friend got the skull and antlers back and cleaned them and brought them to show me what was inside the brain of this deer. The hide was completely healed and did not give away that there was an injury. The threaded portion of the head had snapped off.
The deer had been shot in a prior season with a Wasp Hammer broadhead. It entered the brain but did not kill the deer. It also passed through the hinge of the jaw and had grown over with bone and prevented the law from opening all but the smallest amount.This deer was able to open his mouth just enough to eat and live.
The bone had grown over the broadhead and through the vent in the blade and bridged the gap.
The upper left arrow shows how much hinge movement was allowed in the jaw, The opening and closing of the mouth had worn a curved area away
The shot appears to have taken from the ground and not an elevated stand and looks to be nearly perfectly broadside.
This deer was harvested with a bow a Friend in South Eastern Wisconsin. He made a great hit and the deer piled up inside of 50 yards.
He brought to deer to me for processing. I skinned it for a shoulder mount, stopping right behind the ears.
The buck dressed out at 175 pounds and has a good layer of fat on it’s rump. Every indication was that this was a normal, healthy deer. I returned the head to my friend for mounting. After the taxidermist capped the skull, he cut the skull plate to remove the antlers. As he finished the cut, he hit metal. My friend got the skull and antlers back and cleaned them and brought them to show me what was inside the brain of this deer. The hide was completely healed and did not give away that there was an injury. The threaded portion of the head had snapped off.
The deer had been shot in a prior season with a Wasp Hammer broadhead. It entered the brain but did not kill the deer. It also passed through the hinge of the jaw and had grown over with bone and prevented the law from opening all but the smallest amount.This deer was able to open his mouth just enough to eat and live.
The bone had grown over the broadhead and through the vent in the blade and bridged the gap.
The upper left arrow shows how much hinge movement was allowed in the jaw, The opening and closing of the mouth had worn a curved area away
The shot appears to have taken from the ground and not an elevated stand and looks to be nearly perfectly broadside.