Ray, can you put a dot on where the bullet passed through? Unless the shot was forward of the chest cavity I am not understanding how it could be underneath the spine and not hit lungs.
View attachment 239374
View attachment 239377
I won't call it a void. But I can say I recovered an arrow about 10" long (broken off) with broadhead ( 3 blade G5 type) on the end under the spine, behind the shoulder about halfway back. Broke one rib on way in and hit rib on other side. It had healed over.And after all these years of the internet and hunting forums, not a single surgeon has said, "yes, there is a void."
most butcher have these stories too.I won't call it a void. But I can say I recovered an arrow about 10" long (broken off) with broadhead ( 3 blade G5 type) on the end under the spine, behind the shoulder about halfway back. Broke one rib on way in and hit rib on other side. It had healed over.
This was small 4 point bull. I had seen him in the days preceding and it was late October.
Flame away..
Sent from my SM-G986U using Tapatalk
From an opposing perspective, I have a friend who guided archery blacktail hunters for 30 years and quartering way is his favorite shot. It takes the shoulder blade out of the equation and gives you the most "soft" target to shoot at of any angle.I'll just say as a bow hunter I'll pass this shot angle from experience...
Hard quartering away is not the best shot, in my experience. Slight quarter is great, but from what I see I'll wait for a better shot.
And the d2 or 3 shot they call a liver shot look all pelvic bone to me, it's a put an animal down quick with a gun shot, for a follow-up. But nothing for archery, in my opinion.
My friend who is a retired veterinarian said essentially that.You don't need 5. You won't find a single one, that will tell you you can go under the spine cranial, (to the front) of the diaphragm and not be within the chest cavity. You will also hit the lungs, they extended up beyond the margins of the vertebrae. That is the anatomy and it doesn't change.
There is a whole lotta muscle from the top line to the level of the spinal canal. AKA backstrap. Call this the void if you want, it is a non vital shot/area. It isn't a space beneath the spine and above the chest cavity. That doesn't exist.
Sent from my moto g power using Tapatalk
From an opposing perspective, I have a friend who guided archery blacktail hunters for 30 years and quartering way is his favorite shot. It takes the shoulder blade out of the equation and gives you the most "soft" target to shoot at of any angle.
He can also track like no one I have ever seen, so for what that is worth.
But the arrow was in the chest cavity. High shot in the chest may not kill the animal, Would be rare but can and does happen on occasion. The arrow can't be beneath the spine and not in the thorax unless it is behind the diaphragm.Well I can't explain it either. But I saw it with my own eyes and me and three other hunters all scratched our heads about it. When I first saw it I thought a stick had fallen into the cavity while gutting it. It was just laying there agonist the spine. I grabbed it and it was stuck in the off side rib. The scar tissue had grown around the broadhead and was connected to the inner wall of the chest cavity. I don't recall how close the broken part of the arrow was to other side of the ribs.
I really couldn't understand how it did survive. And he had his own decent size herd of cows he (as a 4 point) pushed around and traveled with over the course of a week. So he was perfectly fine.
I dont like the term void either. I've cleaned dozens of Elk and can't see how its possible.
Sent from my SM-G986U using Tapatalk
I think so.I haven’t read every post but is the void debate that if you hit below the spine, you will always hit the lungs?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Thats what I'm gathering too.I haven’t read every post but is the void debate that if you hit below the spine, you will always hit the lungs?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
So I'm just trying to clarify i guess. It was in front of the diaphragm, in the thorax, below the spine. Ribs on each side hit. I wish I had a cell phone at the time to take pictures. But this was like 2003ish.But the arrow was in the chest cavity. High shot in the chest may not kill the animal, Would be rare but can and does happen on occasion. The arrow can't be beneath the spine and not in the thorax unless it is behind the diaphragm.