mporter012
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2019
- Messages
- 252
I only say this so people know that I'm not the kind of hunter that is just out there flinging ammo. I've never in my life shot at a running deer, I don't take long shots, i consider 250 to be my absolute max range, and in field, i've never shot past 200, and only that 2x (I'm newer to the west, mostly a whitetail hunter). And so in the 25 years hunting, I've never lost an animal, and I've never experienced what i did yesterday.
I put a long stock on a legal but small mulie buck in tough terrain, and unfortunately ended up spooking a doe, and in the process the buck spooked, but I gave a loud grunt and he stopped. Facing right, broadside, 165 yards, downhill. I got set up quick, shot, and dropped him, and he rolled backwards down the hill 3x, then i lost sight of him, and heard a crashing noise. Idk why but i had a bad feeling because i've seen video before where this happens, although i've personally never experienced it. Went down to recover deer, and after about 10 minutes looked up and saw him on top of a knob walk into some cover, and appeared to be limping/wounded (obviously). Couldn't get a shot. I gave him some time, circled way up this mountain in the direction he was headed, and ended up bumping him again, and then spent the next 6 hours looking for him, from 11am to dark. I called a guy with tracking dogs, and he basically said, prob high shoulder, and with no good blood, would be a miracle for the dogs to track.
Couple questions.
1. Assuming it's high shoulder, could he survive or is he likely doomed? I was looking a vital/skeleton diagrams, and it's anyone guess, but a true high should should hit lung, but a mid-should could just hit flesh/bone.
2. Should I notch my tag?
3. Was shooting .308 Barnes TSX copper 168 grain, feel like if this was a .300 win mag, I'd have a deer in hand. Am i wrong? I say this because I'm wonderful if the bullet hit the shoulder and just stuck there, no pass through.
4. What else could i do in the recovery, or do I just need to move on?
I feel horrible and sick about the situation. Thanks for the reading and let me know what you think
I put a long stock on a legal but small mulie buck in tough terrain, and unfortunately ended up spooking a doe, and in the process the buck spooked, but I gave a loud grunt and he stopped. Facing right, broadside, 165 yards, downhill. I got set up quick, shot, and dropped him, and he rolled backwards down the hill 3x, then i lost sight of him, and heard a crashing noise. Idk why but i had a bad feeling because i've seen video before where this happens, although i've personally never experienced it. Went down to recover deer, and after about 10 minutes looked up and saw him on top of a knob walk into some cover, and appeared to be limping/wounded (obviously). Couldn't get a shot. I gave him some time, circled way up this mountain in the direction he was headed, and ended up bumping him again, and then spent the next 6 hours looking for him, from 11am to dark. I called a guy with tracking dogs, and he basically said, prob high shoulder, and with no good blood, would be a miracle for the dogs to track.
Couple questions.
1. Assuming it's high shoulder, could he survive or is he likely doomed? I was looking a vital/skeleton diagrams, and it's anyone guess, but a true high should should hit lung, but a mid-should could just hit flesh/bone.
2. Should I notch my tag?
3. Was shooting .308 Barnes TSX copper 168 grain, feel like if this was a .300 win mag, I'd have a deer in hand. Am i wrong? I say this because I'm wonderful if the bullet hit the shoulder and just stuck there, no pass through.
4. What else could i do in the recovery, or do I just need to move on?
I feel horrible and sick about the situation. Thanks for the reading and let me know what you think