Foxtrot1
Well-known member
A couple of weeks ago, I had a strange experience with a deer I shot.
I was hunting from the ground and had a buck chase a doe right to me. I ended up shooting him broadside at about 15-20 yds with my 7x57. After the shot I was expecting to see a deer lying there, but he had disappeared over the edge of the ridge we were on. I gave him a few minutes and walked over to where he was standing. No blood or hair. It had been raining all day, but had finally stopped, so I was able to follow his tracks. He had bailed off the side of the ridge and would occasionally slide, kicking up pine straw. 200 yards and still no blood. When I lost his tracks I started circling because the woods were open and I thought I might pick him up. No luck, so at that point I called in help and we were able to pick up more kicked up pine straw farther down the ridge. We finally found him 1/4 of a mile from where I shot him. Never found blood or hair on the ground or on trees. The shot hit the center of the rear edge of his closest shoulder and angled to exit high in his rib cage. Double lung with a 1" exit. His chest cavity was full and ran out of the exit wound when we rolled him over. Crazy he made it that far. Maybe since his adrenaline was up chasing does and the fact he ran down hill helped him go farther? I wonder if being on the same level with him when I shot him affected the blood trail?
It really makes me wonder about all the deer people "miss" and give up after looking 100 yds. I have never seen one shot with a rifle leave no sign before.
I was hunting from the ground and had a buck chase a doe right to me. I ended up shooting him broadside at about 15-20 yds with my 7x57. After the shot I was expecting to see a deer lying there, but he had disappeared over the edge of the ridge we were on. I gave him a few minutes and walked over to where he was standing. No blood or hair. It had been raining all day, but had finally stopped, so I was able to follow his tracks. He had bailed off the side of the ridge and would occasionally slide, kicking up pine straw. 200 yards and still no blood. When I lost his tracks I started circling because the woods were open and I thought I might pick him up. No luck, so at that point I called in help and we were able to pick up more kicked up pine straw farther down the ridge. We finally found him 1/4 of a mile from where I shot him. Never found blood or hair on the ground or on trees. The shot hit the center of the rear edge of his closest shoulder and angled to exit high in his rib cage. Double lung with a 1" exit. His chest cavity was full and ran out of the exit wound when we rolled him over. Crazy he made it that far. Maybe since his adrenaline was up chasing does and the fact he ran down hill helped him go farther? I wonder if being on the same level with him when I shot him affected the blood trail?
It really makes me wonder about all the deer people "miss" and give up after looking 100 yds. I have never seen one shot with a rifle leave no sign before.