wildernessmaster
Lil-Rokslider
About a week ago I took a shot on a deer at about 200 yards. I normally can tell immediately watching through my scope if an animal is hit. This one stood still post shot (oddly) then walked into a trot off. At the time I thought the reaction weird. I walked down and walked around in decent light and found no blood trail. Walked the edge of the field and woods for about 500 yards which I saw him exit toward and didn't find a blood trail.
I blew it off as I had intentionally aimed a bit low due to some cattle possibly being behind the animal (they were in that pasture and I didn't think they had moved that way but wanted to be conservative). I also had thought the distance was closer to 150 so it was probably a dirt shot. It was also a standing, unsupported shot and I was freezing as I had left my jacket at home. Lots of factors to cause a miss.
Oh well, better safe than sorry.
Yesterday, I was back on the same farm and had another deer come down a trail. Knew the distance. Gun dialed in for it. Gun on tripod and deer fully broadside. Pull trigger, boom, deer once again stands oddly still post shot then walk trots off. Again walk down and look for blood trail in good light for 500 yards - no Bueno.
While still looking for blood trail, I hear a deer alert. I see the deer trot off about 10 yards and it begins to come back toward me. At less than 30 yards broadside I take a shot. Deer again stands still oddly post shot then begins to buck of - I am almost certain given the way it bucked it was hit.
Walk to spot I shot it and no where within 100 yards can I find a blood trail. I walked the woods well into darkness and no deer.
Now this means one of three things:
1. I suddenly have gotten the worst case of gun yips ever in the history of hunting.
2. My gun is so off that it can't hit the broadside of a barn
3. The round I am shooting is too much for these thin NC deer and literally not expanding and shooting through.
I discount (1) given I have killed 3 critters this year (2 with bow and one with gun). I also have always killed what I have shot at. And finally these were does so I am not overly excited or nervous (big buck fever). Finally for me to miss at 30 yards? Never has happened.
I discount (2) because again the 30 yard factor would mean a gun that just 2 weeks ago killed a doe at 200 yards was massively off. Nothing on the gun feels loose nor am I away of the gun being knocked around badly enough to make a sub moa gun miss at 30 yards.
So (3). I had planned on just bow hunting all year (even in gun season) until my buddy asked me to come cull some deer. Given I moved this year, I have been getting all my guns back set up and running right (they had been in storage). My AR10/308 was the only one I felt was reasonably sighted in (from last season). It bad been worked up for my elk hunt with federal edge tlr 175 gr bullets.
My thought at the moment is these smaller deer are just not enough body to cause the bullet to expand properly. That is what is causing the odd pause after the shot. They are hit, but its so quick and a unexpanded shoot thru that they are like "what was that". The one I did kill with I could not find a solid entrance or exit wound and I think the only reason it did not do the same was the deer jumped the shot and I got more of a transverse shoot longer through the body letting the bullet expand.
Thoughts?
I am going back in today to scour the swamp and brush in better day light to see if I can find all 3.
I blew it off as I had intentionally aimed a bit low due to some cattle possibly being behind the animal (they were in that pasture and I didn't think they had moved that way but wanted to be conservative). I also had thought the distance was closer to 150 so it was probably a dirt shot. It was also a standing, unsupported shot and I was freezing as I had left my jacket at home. Lots of factors to cause a miss.
Oh well, better safe than sorry.
Yesterday, I was back on the same farm and had another deer come down a trail. Knew the distance. Gun dialed in for it. Gun on tripod and deer fully broadside. Pull trigger, boom, deer once again stands oddly still post shot then walk trots off. Again walk down and look for blood trail in good light for 500 yards - no Bueno.
While still looking for blood trail, I hear a deer alert. I see the deer trot off about 10 yards and it begins to come back toward me. At less than 30 yards broadside I take a shot. Deer again stands still oddly post shot then begins to buck of - I am almost certain given the way it bucked it was hit.
Walk to spot I shot it and no where within 100 yards can I find a blood trail. I walked the woods well into darkness and no deer.
Now this means one of three things:
1. I suddenly have gotten the worst case of gun yips ever in the history of hunting.
2. My gun is so off that it can't hit the broadside of a barn
3. The round I am shooting is too much for these thin NC deer and literally not expanding and shooting through.
I discount (1) given I have killed 3 critters this year (2 with bow and one with gun). I also have always killed what I have shot at. And finally these were does so I am not overly excited or nervous (big buck fever). Finally for me to miss at 30 yards? Never has happened.
I discount (2) because again the 30 yard factor would mean a gun that just 2 weeks ago killed a doe at 200 yards was massively off. Nothing on the gun feels loose nor am I away of the gun being knocked around badly enough to make a sub moa gun miss at 30 yards.
So (3). I had planned on just bow hunting all year (even in gun season) until my buddy asked me to come cull some deer. Given I moved this year, I have been getting all my guns back set up and running right (they had been in storage). My AR10/308 was the only one I felt was reasonably sighted in (from last season). It bad been worked up for my elk hunt with federal edge tlr 175 gr bullets.
My thought at the moment is these smaller deer are just not enough body to cause the bullet to expand properly. That is what is causing the odd pause after the shot. They are hit, but its so quick and a unexpanded shoot thru that they are like "what was that". The one I did kill with I could not find a solid entrance or exit wound and I think the only reason it did not do the same was the deer jumped the shot and I got more of a transverse shoot longer through the body letting the bullet expand.
Thoughts?
I am going back in today to scour the swamp and brush in better day light to see if I can find all 3.