64Springer
75 Cal.
Hesitated at starting this thread. But there are a few hunting threads going on right now that make it relevant.
I'm sure some of you have seen this diagram online and some of you haven't.
This has been my go-to Bambi anatomy picture for decades. I review it each and every year. It helps me to get my bearings again. It tells me that Bambi is not some big tan thing. It tells me what's really important. It tells me what's going on inside Bambi.
This is not to pick on the guys that use paper plates as a guide to determine the size of the vitals area. It's to show that the area you really want to hit is much smaller than a paper plate. The area is the size of a softball.
The area you want to aim for is the heart. And all of the fat, juicy, bloody arteries surrounding the heart. This area is tiny. But if you put a ball through this area, that deer is dead on the spot. No tracking. No frustration. Bang-Flop. But to do this you have to be able to hit this area. Consistently. And practicing on a 9 inch target does no good when you're really wanting to hit a 4 inch target.
When you have a deer in your sights, don't look at the tan skin. Look through the deer. Look into the deer. Memorize where the heart is in relationship to the front leg and aim for the heart. If you miss the heart, then you have lungs. But the lungs should not be your prime target.
We've all watched The Patriot. And you know what I'm about to say. That's right. "Aim Small-Miss Small". Nothing could be truer. I watched a show one time and a professional shooter was asked what he aimed at to make his shots. He said "I don't aim for the center. I aim for the center of the center." Brilliant!
Some will appreciate this thread. Some will reject it. But I promise that if more hunters followed these guidelines, there'd be more venison in the freezer.
I'm sure some of you have seen this diagram online and some of you haven't.
This has been my go-to Bambi anatomy picture for decades. I review it each and every year. It helps me to get my bearings again. It tells me that Bambi is not some big tan thing. It tells me what's really important. It tells me what's going on inside Bambi.
This is not to pick on the guys that use paper plates as a guide to determine the size of the vitals area. It's to show that the area you really want to hit is much smaller than a paper plate. The area is the size of a softball.
The area you want to aim for is the heart. And all of the fat, juicy, bloody arteries surrounding the heart. This area is tiny. But if you put a ball through this area, that deer is dead on the spot. No tracking. No frustration. Bang-Flop. But to do this you have to be able to hit this area. Consistently. And practicing on a 9 inch target does no good when you're really wanting to hit a 4 inch target.
When you have a deer in your sights, don't look at the tan skin. Look through the deer. Look into the deer. Memorize where the heart is in relationship to the front leg and aim for the heart. If you miss the heart, then you have lungs. But the lungs should not be your prime target.
We've all watched The Patriot. And you know what I'm about to say. That's right. "Aim Small-Miss Small". Nothing could be truer. I watched a show one time and a professional shooter was asked what he aimed at to make his shots. He said "I don't aim for the center. I aim for the center of the center." Brilliant!
Some will appreciate this thread. Some will reject it. But I promise that if more hunters followed these guidelines, there'd be more venison in the freezer.