Hello Fellow Hunting Folk,
I am wondering how many of us have experienced the deer being struck by a patched, round ball, and the deer dropped where it was standing.
Plus I'd like to know how many of us regularly recover the deer in less than 50 yards, if not within sight of the spot where the deer was hit?
I ask as a fellow on another forum shooting modern rifles was remarking that his deer rarely drop where standing, but normally go less than 100 yards with a double-lung hit.
I for one have experienced only one true bang-flop when I hit the deer in the spine. I too like to use the double lung broadside hit, but with a .530 patched, round ball my experience is the deer normally do not move anywhere near 50 yards, and some could be seen from the spot where they had stood when hit.
I've only had one go more than 50 yards, and that was a buck that was moving to avoid foxhunters and hounds, and I got a shot at him when he stopped and looked back at the sound of the foxhunter's horn. He was probably full of adrenaline...
So what's the "average" experience?
:idunno:
LD
I am wondering how many of us have experienced the deer being struck by a patched, round ball, and the deer dropped where it was standing.
Plus I'd like to know how many of us regularly recover the deer in less than 50 yards, if not within sight of the spot where the deer was hit?
I ask as a fellow on another forum shooting modern rifles was remarking that his deer rarely drop where standing, but normally go less than 100 yards with a double-lung hit.
I for one have experienced only one true bang-flop when I hit the deer in the spine. I too like to use the double lung broadside hit, but with a .530 patched, round ball my experience is the deer normally do not move anywhere near 50 yards, and some could be seen from the spot where they had stood when hit.
I've only had one go more than 50 yards, and that was a buck that was moving to avoid foxhunters and hounds, and I got a shot at him when he stopped and looked back at the sound of the foxhunter's horn. He was probably full of adrenaline...
So what's the "average" experience?
:idunno:
LD