I noticed on another blk pwdr forum that there seemed to be a lot of misses during the late primitive muzzleloader season. That brought to mind something I learned many yrs. ago about deer reaction to hits...sometimes they don't...and I wondered to myself if when using roundballs at fairly low velocities if they might not even more.
I know I was guilty of loosing more than one buck because he didn't act like I thought he should when hit with shotgun or rifle. That was a time and place when deer seasons were a new thing and there wasn't a source to learn from in the deep south where I lived. The only deer hunting around was scarce and with dogs and buckshot. This was pre-treestand..and in lots of northern states it was even against the law to hunt from elevated stands. In other words I learned as I went, about deer hunting.
Back to the deer reaction to hits...I learned the sad way that just because a deer doesn't get knocked down, stumble or limp off, has no reflection on him being hit or not. I learned by hunting in the same area a few days later and recognizing a dead carcass as one I had missed a few days before...and I learned that same lesson more than once. I just had it in my head that anything hit with a bullet was going to be knocked side ways at least...but as most of us know nowadays...that's a far cry from reality...and most likely more so when using roundballs in a muzzleloader. I now go to where the deer was when I shot at him and do whatever it takes to convince myself I didn't hit it...and it takes a lot and should.
On that same forum a guy made the remark that he had come upon several dead deer that had been shot with roundballs...and that made me decide to post this thread about hunting with roundballs...that and the fact that this is going to be my first yr. to use them and I would appreciate all the in's and out's to use them most effectively.
I'm not trying to start anything about loosing game with roundballs..etc. like the bow vs gun thing..I'm not even interested in their effectiveness vs a conical or whatever. I already know they work and decided that's the way I'm going to hunt. I kinda feel like it might take the same mindset as I have during handgun hunting using revolvers with hard-cast wheel weights...but don't know and that's why the post.
Thanks for any info.
I know I was guilty of loosing more than one buck because he didn't act like I thought he should when hit with shotgun or rifle. That was a time and place when deer seasons were a new thing and there wasn't a source to learn from in the deep south where I lived. The only deer hunting around was scarce and with dogs and buckshot. This was pre-treestand..and in lots of northern states it was even against the law to hunt from elevated stands. In other words I learned as I went, about deer hunting.
Back to the deer reaction to hits...I learned the sad way that just because a deer doesn't get knocked down, stumble or limp off, has no reflection on him being hit or not. I learned by hunting in the same area a few days later and recognizing a dead carcass as one I had missed a few days before...and I learned that same lesson more than once. I just had it in my head that anything hit with a bullet was going to be knocked side ways at least...but as most of us know nowadays...that's a far cry from reality...and most likely more so when using roundballs in a muzzleloader. I now go to where the deer was when I shot at him and do whatever it takes to convince myself I didn't hit it...and it takes a lot and should.
On that same forum a guy made the remark that he had come upon several dead deer that had been shot with roundballs...and that made me decide to post this thread about hunting with roundballs...that and the fact that this is going to be my first yr. to use them and I would appreciate all the in's and out's to use them most effectively.
I'm not trying to start anything about loosing game with roundballs..etc. like the bow vs gun thing..I'm not even interested in their effectiveness vs a conical or whatever. I already know they work and decided that's the way I'm going to hunt. I kinda feel like it might take the same mindset as I have during handgun hunting using revolvers with hard-cast wheel weights...but don't know and that's why the post.
Thanks for any info.