There’s an easy solution for it.
I’m going to try to take a day off next week. Otherwise, I’ll be back next sunday. Was going to go this sunday, but I was offered easy overtime. I booked a hotel for Oct 27-31 in Painted Post. I’m finally going back to Erwin WMA. I plan to hunt that week hard.
Well......I arrowed one of the 8 pointers I've been waiting for this evening. He took a step last second and I didnt get the placement I'd hoped for. Followed a decent trail into the thick and have to come back tomorrow. Hope he isn't suffering and bleeds out quick. To be continued.....
How beat up was your arrow? I've seen ones the have been pinned in the shoulder blade and rib cage. They usually will show the blood you described.I hate to write this, but I have to get it off my chest.
I hit a monster yesterday. 30 yards out. I'm a killer shot with my bow at that range. But I'm not stupid enough to take it unless the target is large (big buck), and not moving. Both were affirmative. I have lighted nocks. When I let the shot off on this deer, which was broadside and not moving, I felt real good. Arrow hit exactly where I aimed, no ducking. In behind the leg and through both lungs. He bolted back into thick brush and almost immediately the sound of crashing/running stopped, a sure sign of a double-lung and deer down.
I started to gather my stuff to get out of the stand and to my fucking shock and dismay in bounds the same damn deer with an arrow popping out of his side. I am crestfallen. I immediately nock another arrow to attempt a second shot but he runs off before I can do it.
I know what the books say and I know what I've personally experienced, and that is that deer never lay down for me, so I get down from the tree, pursue a pretty good blood trail. It starts to lighten up. Then I see my arrow on the trail drenched in pure red. I know at this point the wound would either close, or get even worse. Sadly, it was the latter. It goes down to almost nothing. My hunting buddy and I manage to track it to the edge of the property into a corn field and I'll be damned if there was a speck more of blood.
Clearly, I did not hit lung. And I did not hit guts, either. I believe I got in just behind the lungs. I'll even entertain the idea he was exhaling at the time of hit, and the lungs contracted forward (?). My problem is I've looked at so many anatomy charts online and taken a half dozen deer since I started, but for whatever reason I often end up aiming for deer in that crease behind the front leg and the stomach, and the lungs are just never that far back. This is the so-called line directly up the back of the front leg many people aim for, but I have hit deer there and it is absolutely not where the lungs are on the ones I've hit.
I look for lessons in failure and I wish this one was more obvious. It wasn't a hail mary shot, the equipment didn't fail, and I didn't miss my target. It's painful given the time I've spent studying deer anatomy that I still aim for the wrong damn spot in the field.
Anyway, that sucked.
Mine left a good trail to start but it soon faded. We were going on one to two drops before one guy spotted him against a tree. I honestly didnt think we'd find him.My best buck ever, a 7pt two years ago, got away from me. I tracked him after an hour and saw him laying down, looked dead. Waited 20 min minutes before approaching. He jumped up and bolted. I was shocked. Tracked him almost half a mile before losing the trail cold. Heartbreaking.
Nice job for your first time.Yup, all good. Made me pay the price though. Had to drag him back through hell to get him home. Of to processor tomorrow.
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For sure. Very happy with it even if I'm a newbie. Shoots even better when you adjust it to an adult draw!Nice job for your first time.
At least the bow didn't wear ya down carrying it.
Just bustin chops. Needed a little humor release after these last dozen hours.I had to sell it to a knuckle dragger
Oh well, at least it's being put to good use!
Arrow was perfect, broadhead I'm sure opened up fine and I was able to clean the blades out. Still carrying that sinking feeling. Losing deer is really bothersome. There is no chance it hit shoulder blade because I saw the arrow travel courtesy of the luminock. I have a 305 IBO bow I pull at 60 lbs with 415 grain arrows. I love archery, but my cheap crossbow definitely hits like a freight train. I may not get out until again until xbow season starts.How beat up was your arrow? I've seen ones the have been pinned in the shoulder blade and rib cage. They usually will show the blood you described.
It sucks. I'm still not quite clear on wtf kills deer sometimes. Last year I took a nice shot (I thought) on a deer but it turned at the last second away from me so when arrow hit I was like damn it. I followed a pretty light blood trail and after 70 yards there it was piled up. I never hit lungs or heart. The arrow had just done such a mess of bleeding overall that the deer very quickly expired.Not proud to admit it but mine was hit pretty much hind quarter. Combination of my "newbness" with an unsteady shot, and his moving when I didnt expect him to, left him gut shot. We found him this morning around 9. He was stiff and I cant hazard a guess at how long he'd been dead but was mildly warm when we gutted him.
I felt horrible all night knowing I did not hit vitals and that he would most likely suffer the worst death. Sadly I'm sure he did but I was honestly surprised he was dead at all. I would've figured just wounded.
He went deep into the swamp and made me (and my recon team) pay for it. My ass is whooped and I think its gonna take me a couple days to recover. Guess it serves me right. Lesson learned.
My last deer was like that. Spotty trail, much lighter than I like, trail started to get weaker and weaker, and then there he was completely down. That is what I was hoping would happen on Sunday because the blood trail on this deer was actually pretty decent, but the things clot up and then it just vanished.Mine left a good trail to start but it soon faded. We were going on one to two drops before one guy spotted him against a tree. I honestly didnt think we'd find him.
Definitely no dark blood and no bubbles. Just standard looking blood. No chance I hit too low. I really believe it was just a sliver behind the lungs. I'm damn close to buying a camera to review these. I hate only being "fairly sure". I just have that flash in my mind, that picture of the arrow with its light hitting a split second before the deer ducked and bolted (It didn't jump the string, though).Any chance you hit low? There's a cavity with no vitals low on the chest. This will usually produce normal read blood and close up relatively fast. If you get dark blood usually liver. If you get bright pink blood usually lung. You probably know that but some people may not.
Hey it sucks I know but in reality nothing goes to waste in the wild. Worse case you just made some other critters fat and happy.Definitely no dark blood and no bubbles. Just standard looking blood. No chance I hit too low. I really believe it was just a sliver behind the lungs. I'm damn close to buying a camera to review these. I hate only being "fairly sure". I just have that flash in my mind, that picture of the arrow with its light hitting a split second before the deer ducked and bolted (It didn't jump the string, though).