I disagree, I lost a big Roosevelt bull this fall. I nailed it in the chest at 80 yrds and recovered the arrow. I was shooting 70 pound bow with 125 grain broadheads, I think they were 490g total weight, 30.5 Draw length. The arrow showed where the penetration stopped at about 4-5 inches in and the broad head was unscrewed from the arrow. Something stopped that arrow.....I'll never know. I never got a heavy tracking blood flow and watched that bull decend a thousand feet down the mountain running full steam with a second bull. Bears and Big bulls need more.....
My shooting was spot on but I never anticipated the arrow stopping like that. The bull did take a forward step with the shot and I theorize the large moving muscle on the big bull grabbed some of the momentum of the broadhead and rammed it in to a rib. It was not a shoulder/scapula shot.
I've got 80 pound limbs enroute from Hoyt.........
Imagine an steeply angled shot or a frontal.........If you can pull it go big. A big bear, Buffalo, Elk, Mt Goats those are some tough critters, give em something to think about. I'll never forget that elk shrugging off an arrow and running out of my life. It's painful to type here but I hope someone learns and has a better experience than I did.
I disagree, I lost a big Roosevelt bull this fall. I nailed it in the chest at 80 yrds and recovered the arrow. I was shooting 70 pound bow with 125 grain broadheads, I think they were 490g total weight, 30.5 Draw length. The arrow showed where the penetration stopped at about 4-5 inches in and the broad head was unscrewed from the arrow. Something stopped that arrow.....I'll never know. I never got a heavy tracking blood flow and watched that bull decend a thousand feet down the mountain running full steam with a second bull. Bears and Big bulls need more.....
My shooting was spot on but I never anticipated the arrow stopping like that. The bull did take a forward step with the shot and I theorize the large moving muscle on the big bull grabbed some of the momentum of the broadhead and rammed it in to a rib. It was not a shoulder/scapula shot.
I've got 80 pound limbs enroute from Hoyt.........
Imagine an steeply angled shot or a frontal.........If you can pull it go big. A big bear, Buffalo, Elk, Mt Goats those are some tough critters, give em something to think about. I'll never forget that elk shrugging off an arrow and running out of my life. It's painful to type here but I hope someone learns and has a better experience than I did.