Snow on the Roof
40 Cal.
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2009
- Messages
- 384
- Reaction score
- 3
I killed 2 does yesterday with my Jack Garner built 20 gauge smoothbore. 80 Gr FFF with a home cast .600 RB wraped in .010 ticking and deer tallow lube. I've taken a few deer in the last 40+ years but never with a smoothie nor a flintlock so I am very pleased.
I've a few observatons. Both where low shoulder shots at less than 20 yards. Why low I'm not certain but be sure it is not the gun but the shooter. Being shoulder shots both where recovered quickly and the autopsys reveiled the incredible distructive power of a .600 roundball. Previuosly a .54 rb was the biggest I had used and I never saw this kind of devistation and mass tissue damage. The first was at 20 yards from a 25 ft treestand with a quartering away shot angle. The ball hit the left shoulder completely destroying it while continuing through the left lung and creating extensive arterial damage, exiting out the right sternum caught the right lower leg and continued on. The second doe was a 15 yard broadside shot from a 12 foot ladder stand. Again the shot was low entering the right shoulder tearing out both lungs and the desending aorta then passed through the left shoulder before exiting. How a deer can go another 50 yards with both shoulders gone and major cardio-pulmonary damage is a testiment to the survival instincts of these creatures.
All this gives me pause to consider a smoothbore for more hunting as well a better understanding of Mr. Roundball's term "wompability!"
Snow
I've a few observatons. Both where low shoulder shots at less than 20 yards. Why low I'm not certain but be sure it is not the gun but the shooter. Being shoulder shots both where recovered quickly and the autopsys reveiled the incredible distructive power of a .600 roundball. Previuosly a .54 rb was the biggest I had used and I never saw this kind of devistation and mass tissue damage. The first was at 20 yards from a 25 ft treestand with a quartering away shot angle. The ball hit the left shoulder completely destroying it while continuing through the left lung and creating extensive arterial damage, exiting out the right sternum caught the right lower leg and continued on. The second doe was a 15 yard broadside shot from a 12 foot ladder stand. Again the shot was low entering the right shoulder tearing out both lungs and the desending aorta then passed through the left shoulder before exiting. How a deer can go another 50 yards with both shoulders gone and major cardio-pulmonary damage is a testiment to the survival instincts of these creatures.
All this gives me pause to consider a smoothbore for more hunting as well a better understanding of Mr. Roundball's term "wompability!"
Snow