This 20 years ago....but it would be similar to a 3 blade G5. I want to say it was one of those.Curious what broadhead? Doesn't tell the whole story by any means, I'm guessing it was a small head.
This 20 years ago....but it would be similar to a 3 blade G5. I want to say it was one of those.Curious what broadhead? Doesn't tell the whole story by any means, I'm guessing it was a small head.
It was higher than I had obviously hoped but with the extreme down angle and that being the entrance I really figured that bull was toast when the arrow hit him I spent about a hour watching him in the spotter when I took that picture couldn’t believe that it didn’t do the trick so I do believe there is a empty spot in there I’m sure it must have only clipped on lung at best
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Friend is an outfitter in western CO who’s had several animals (over 20 years or so) that were running around weeks later and looking just fine after taking an arrow through that zone - perhaps anecdotal, but I’ve always understood that ‘void’ to be a real risk. Sorry for the result on that bull, I know the rollercoaster ride.
Take the heart and lungs diagram out of this photo, but the area I circled is always a very iffy spot. If you hit in that area, pretty tough going. I had one that lived for 10 minutes in front of me with that shot. Shot him for 20 and he was about 25 yds.
I get that pic of an entry wound doesn't tell the whole story as it could be a steep down angle or hard quartering away shot that only caught one lung....but it sure looks like good placement to me on a broadside shot from ground level.Elk in question.
How did the elk breathe before the Previous hunter shot it?
The only way for the elk’s lungs to not be touching the thoracic wall in the area you found the arrow, is for the chest cavity to not be completely sealed. The only way to break that seal is to breach the chest
I am making no statements as to the lethality of shots in this location, though I have my opinion.
I’m just providing some simple information on animal anatomy, hoping maybe it clears up some misconceptions about how things happen out there.
I won’t say never, I know better. But it seems incredibly difficult to believe this one elk discovered a different way to inflate his lungs than every other elk.
I could be convinced someone shot a small cutting diameter with dull blades, or a mechanical who’s blades broke off on impact or didn’t open, and said arrow did not create enough hemorrhaging to kill the elk. The arrow likely got sheared because it went through shoulder blade. Which would also explain the dulling and lack of penetration. And would aid in sealing up one hole Enough giving the elk a chance to recover.
But I’ll bet the farm a 3’ long arrow with a broadhead on it did not bend and redirect enough times to penetrate the chest cavity And find a path between the chest wall and lungs.
I've been on alot of bloodtrails, and for me, with elk, when you get further than 100 -150 yds, the "shot" maybe a bit different than you thought.