Neck shot ethics

S-3 ranch

WKR
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Thats not a failure. That was a miss
Yeah I didn’t sever the spinal column while aiming for the white patch on the neck on a frontal shot and waited to long after the shot to pick him up with the truck, I assumed ( ass u me ) he was dead because of the shot location
I will blame it on the Rum & Dr Perpper I was drinking 😂😂😂
 
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Dec 13, 2023
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One head shot! I'll never do that again. Pretty awful sight!

I don't do neck shots nor head shots. There is already way more room to miss.
I don't shoot running/moving deer.
I don't shoot until I can get a broad side.
....and I seldom shoot over 100 yards or so.
My favorite shot is "high-shoulder".
I hunt an area that sits on top of a bluff about 100 feet high. It's a long tough haul if one gets over the edge of the bluff.
Ask me! LOL!
 
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For all the neck shooters here, where on the neck are you aiming? Right behind the ear, limiting any neck meat wastage? Or mid-neck for perhaps a little more margin for error? Just curious. My hunting rifles are all sub-MOA rifles and I can hold my own shooting in the field so I'd have zero hesitation to take these shots given reasonable distances but just curious on particular aiming points.
Head on frontal, right under the chin. Anywhere from directly under the chin to 6" below. Side view, anywhere really. Center of the neck will always break the spinal column in MY experiences. I shoot bergers, eld m/x never had an issue.
If your a good enough shot, and your setup is steady enough, right about jawline height at the base of the skull works perfectly.

Sent from my SM-S928U using Tapatalk
 

Laramie

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Thats not a failure. That was a miss
As I stated earlier. Arrogance leads the conversation. Neck shots simply present a smaller target and therfore a higher likelihood of a poor hit that leaves a wounded deer running around the woods. Your earlier comment regarding archery is likely true but it has no bearing on the conversation. The debate is whether a neck shot is ethical. I think most agree it is very lethal if executed properly but it is more challenging than a lung shot. There is no debating that. How hunters interpret that for their personal ethics isn't up to you or me.
 
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goalie

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Upon further reflection I've come to the conclusion that the ethics of a neck shot are the same as any other shot on live game.

Either you have practiced and know you can make the shot with the equipment in your hands, or you're playing "pull and pray" on a live animal.

Whether that's a shot at lungs from 700 yards, or one at the neck from 100 yards, it's ethically the same.
 

Justin Crossley

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This is a neck shot I took at 393 yards a few years back. It was very effective, and there was almost zero meat loss. I was prone with a bipod and rear bag. I had crawled as close as I would get in that situation. I'm a way better and more experienced shooter now and would probably not take this particular shot in those conditions today.

 
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Bullet too hard
Too hard?
A round ball doesn't "expand". Just punches a caliber sized hole in and out.
My muzzleloader days are over, but my favorite load in my T/C Renegade .54 was a .429 caliber, 240 grain solid nose in a sabot with 90 grains of fffG.
Never had a deer run over 50 yards. There was a .429 hole entry and a .429 hole exit.
Not sure about the "why", but you could literally eat right up to the bullet hole.
A large, heavy, slow moving bullet doesn't leave much blood shot meat.
A guy I knew hunted with a .22-250. Those medium sized east Texas whitetails were blood shot from mid neck to last rib with a classic behind the leg shot.....and seldom was a shoulder salvageable!
 
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This is a neck shot I took at 393 yards a few years back. It was very effective, and there was almost zero meat loss. I was prone with a bipod and rear bag. I had crawled as close as I would get in that situation. I'm a way better and more experienced shooter now and would probably not take this particular shot in those conditions today.

Friend and me were hunting Nat'l Forest when we spotted a doe that looked horrible.
As we got closer, it was evident her lower jaw was missing.
We shot her and left her lay. Her lower jaw wound was horrendous and you could tell she was extremely stressed.
No telling how long she had been without water.

If you want to do neck/head shots, go for it! I won't except in cases of "emergency"(?)!
 

goalie

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Friend and me were hunting Nat'l Forest when we spotted a doe that looked horrible.
As we got closer, it was evident her lower jaw was missing.
We shot her and left her lay. Her lower jaw wound was horrendous and you could tell she was extremely stressed.
No telling how long she had been without water.

If you want to do neck/head shots, go for it! I won't except in cases of "emergency"(?)!
I guess I "get it" but again, either you're taking a shot you know you can make or you're playing the "pull and pray" game on a live animal. There's not much similarity to me shooting a buck that is standing stationary giving me a good angle with my 45/70 at 20-25 yards and lobbing one in at 400. I can put 10 shots into an inch black square with that rifle at 25 yards.
 

KenLee

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Too hard?
A round ball doesn't "expand". Just punches a caliber sized hole in and out.
My muzzleloader days are over, but my favorite load in my T/C Renegade .54 was a .429 caliber, 240 grain solid nose in a sabot with 90 grains of fffG.
Never had a deer run over 50 yards. There was a .429 hole entry and a .429 hole exit.
Not sure about the "why", but you could literally eat right up to the bullet hole.
A large, heavy, slow moving bullet doesn't leave much blood shot meat.
A guy I knew hunted with a .22-250. Those medium sized east Texas whitetails were blood shot from mid neck to last rib with a classic behind the leg shot.....and seldom was a shoulder salvageable!
Yes too hard. With an expanding bullet, his neck shot deer would have been laying there dead.
What good is a shoulder if you can't find the deer?
 

Justin Crossley

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Friend and me were hunting Nat'l Forest when we spotted a doe that looked horrible.
As we got closer, it was evident her lower jaw was missing.
We shot her and left her lay. Her lower jaw wound was horrendous and you could tell she was extremely stressed.
No telling how long she had been without water.

If you want to do neck/head shots, go for it! I won't except in cases of "emergency"(?)!
I am not advocating for anyone to take a particular shot or not. I would be much less likely to take the shot today than I was at that time.
 
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I'd rather see more sub-100-yard neck shots than this long-range fad we've got going now, especially if we are discussing ethics.
 
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I usually always bow hunt and last year was the first year I shot a deer with a firearm. I drew a state park hunt which is firearms only. I'm shooting a .44mag and had a prefect neck shot opportunity but never more than that. I opted not taking the shot. After talking to some people who've hunted a lot longer than I have, they say it's an ethical shot. I'm so used to bow hunting not sure if I should have taken that shot? Thoughts?
If it’s not a long shot from a known distance with a good rest, the neck shot is my favorite for deer. It’s quick and clean and the blood shot doesn’t spread like it does behind the shoulders

I have shot several there and watched a bunch more, and it’s been no drama every time. It’s a horrible shot with a bow, and shouldn’t be considered ever, but with a rifle, it works great
 

goalie

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If it’s not a long shot from a known distance with a good rest, the neck shot is my favorite for deer. It’s quick and clean and the blood shot doesn’t spread like it does behind the shoulders

I have shot several there and watched a bunch more, and it’s been no drama every time. It’s a horrible shot with a bow, and shouldn’t be considered ever, but with a rifle, it works great
This sums it up for me as well. Considering I'm usually hunting in the woods and a "long" shot would be 50 yards or so, it's more if the deer gives me a good, stationary shot than anything else. Heck, I usually have a nice steady rest on the rail of the stand.
 
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