Mike Islander
WKR
Shot a large doe last night on a powerline. 180 yards just before last legal light (6.5 147 ELD-M, 2400 fps). Couldn't see which way she ran. Shot entered about the vertical halfway point, about 6 inches behind the crease. Exit was a little lower on the other side, about the size of a quarter. Right through a rib on the way in, but didn't get the explosive wound channel these are known for.
I searched for about 30 minutes after dark, finding no blood beyond the initial impact point, and then was joined by four of my hunt club members. Finally found a tiny drop of blood across the street from the powerline, about 20 yards away. We hit the woods and searched for about another hour or so before finding her. Attached is the GPS track recording that I started after about an hour or more in. The lines shows the last 30 minutes of us tracking blood like bushmen in very scrubby woods, then us dragging her out to a field. It was amazing how we would find one tiny drop of blood, smaller than a pencil eraser, then 15 feet away we would find what looked like a murder scene.
Thankfully she eventually brushed against a lot of smooth saplings, leaving blood about 2 feet above the ground. Again, I started the recording well into the search, and that 30-minute portion alone
measures 0.8 miles that she wandered around. The doe was shot slightly back
and slightly high, hitting both lungs but in the back, leaving them partially working. Without the usual upset, no damage to liver and large heart blood vessels intact. Did not hit the heart at all. Amazing how long they can live with limited lung function.
I've been lucky enough to have not lost a deer yet, and man it sure felt awful for a while there. These men stepped up and literally lead the charge into some incredibly nasty thick woods until we found her. Great group of folks we have at our club.
I searched for about 30 minutes after dark, finding no blood beyond the initial impact point, and then was joined by four of my hunt club members. Finally found a tiny drop of blood across the street from the powerline, about 20 yards away. We hit the woods and searched for about another hour or so before finding her. Attached is the GPS track recording that I started after about an hour or more in. The lines shows the last 30 minutes of us tracking blood like bushmen in very scrubby woods, then us dragging her out to a field. It was amazing how we would find one tiny drop of blood, smaller than a pencil eraser, then 15 feet away we would find what looked like a murder scene.
Thankfully she eventually brushed against a lot of smooth saplings, leaving blood about 2 feet above the ground. Again, I started the recording well into the search, and that 30-minute portion alone
measures 0.8 miles that she wandered around. The doe was shot slightly back
and slightly high, hitting both lungs but in the back, leaving them partially working. Without the usual upset, no damage to liver and large heart blood vessels intact. Did not hit the heart at all. Amazing how long they can live with limited lung function.
I've been lucky enough to have not lost a deer yet, and man it sure felt awful for a while there. These men stepped up and literally lead the charge into some incredibly nasty thick woods until we found her. Great group of folks we have at our club.