I think he estimated 18 but stepped it off after the shot at 12.Thought you said 12 yards earlier. So 20 yard pin at 12 yards?
My vote: sore backstrap, keep hunting.
I think he estimated 18 but stepped it off after the shot at 12.Thought you said 12 yards earlier. So 20 yard pin at 12 yards?
I'd bet anything you are right about him stopping to look around.Was the bull still visible to you at the location you found the blood? Many times I have seen a non-vital hit animal (deer mostly) run off 20-50 yards an d stop to look around like “what just happened” giving a little time for blood to pool up under them before they move off again. Usually though there’s not an arrow still skewered through their chest or back. Surprised you didn’t get a pass through the ribs at 12 yards.
I've found the same thing in 2 bulls I've taken in AZ. 8-10" of broken arrow shaft with grislled up broadheads high in the chest cavity. These were completely healed up and looked like both bulls lived a long time.I don't know if I would really call it a void. My experience was gutting a bull I had killed with rifle. As I was gutting it, I noticed what I thought was a stick laying close to the spine (bull was on its back). I grabbed it and felt it was attached (by soft tissue) and realized it was an arrow. I pulled it loose and found about 9-12" of arrow with a 3 blade broadhead like a G5. The broadhead was covered in scar tissue. Entrance was 4-6 ribs from the back, and it broke a rib going in and then stopped against a rib on the other side. The bull was young, a 4 point, and was running a herd of a dozen cows. I hunted him off and on for 2-3 days. He was completely fine.
I've probably cleaned and quartered 100+ elk over the years, and I, for the life of me, cannot explain it. There is a huge artery against the spine, and the lungs go right up against that.
My only guess is the broadhead was really dull and whatever tissue it came into contact with as it went through the bull didn't get cut.
I saw another picture last week of a similar hit, but it was really far forward. At the very front of the thoracic cavity. Which makes even less sense.
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Lost my bull this year. Hit mine a bit back. No doubt he died. But it dumped rain all night after my shot. Washed away all blood and tracks. Feel your pain! Archery is hard.Back out again this morning beating feet. No birds in the sky or smells in the air other bulls are screaming… I think I’m gonna punch my tag regardless. Gonna give it until dark today before I lose hope. For the guy that asked about my draw length I’m at 70lbs at 29 1/2 inch draw and yes I did touch them up from factory …. They were shaving hairs. This was my first bull and first archery animal after training for 3 years .. the first 2 years of archery I refused to hunt due to inexperience and lack of confidence in shooting ability to wound an animal.
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I agree with this. If you made a poor lethal shot and never recovered the animal, I think you punch your tag. Nothing pisses me off more than guys running around wounding or mortally wounding multiple animals. I also think this approach makes you prepare better and put some thought into shots you take.Not sure what the right answer is on punching a tag when you don’t find the animal. Think it depends on the person and situation. I punched mine because I had no doubt the bull was dead. If I thought he may have lived, I wouldn’t punch it.
Birds and smell should start to show up tomorrow.Final update as the sun sets on me on this hillside I will not physically knock this tag yet, I plan on coming out here to look for this bull alive or dead a few more times before the season ends. I WILL not take another bull except this one assuming he’s walking, I find him dead the tag is notched obviously. While the tag isn’t physically notched it is to me for this bull. until I run out of season or find him I will continue to look. Morally I owe it to this bull to continue to hunt him. I will refuse to take another bull had one on me this evening at 25 yards and didn’t even think about it
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I love it man - I respect this!Final update as the sun sets on me on this hillside I will not physically knock this tag yet, I plan on coming out here to look for this bull alive or dead a few more times before the season ends. I WILL not take another bull except this one assuming he’s walking, I find him dead the tag is notched obviously. While the tag isn’t physically notched it is to me for this bull. until I run out of season or find him I will continue to look. Morally I owe it to this bull to continue to hunt him. I will refuse to take another bull had one on me this evening at 25 yards and didn’t even think about it
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Birds meaning crows and robber jays. You should be able to see and hear crows from a mile away.Birds coming and going from a specific area, that's what you're looking for. Whether it's high or low isn't necessarily the most important. It's where you can see the most territory the elk may be in.
Perfect way to handle the situation, I wish more people would be as ethical as you.Final update as the sun sets on me on this hillside I will not physically knock this tag yet, I plan on coming out here to look for this bull alive or dead a few more times before the season ends. I WILL not take another bull except this one assuming he’s walking, I find him dead the tag is notched obviously. While the tag isn’t physically notched it is to me for this bull. until I run out of season or find him I will continue to look. Morally I owe it to this bull to continue to hunt him. I will refuse to take another bull had one on me this evening at 25 yards and didn’t even think about it
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