I haven't taken my Hawken out deer hunting yet, but after speaking for a few people I have a question about blood trails. A friend who is a fanatical deer hunter in PA will only use conicals while deer hunting with his muzzleloader because of a lack of blood trails. I didn't give his opinion much thought; but after speaking with two guys who run deer retrieval dogs, one in NJ and another in NY, they both stated that they've had several retrievals where a round ball left zero to no blood trail even though it was a well placed fatal shot. Just curious about other peoples experiences.
Thanks.
Chief, there are a lot of other factors that may influencing your buddy's opinion of which he is unaware.
First, why is he worrying about blood trails? I have more than a dozen deer in the past twenty years, and have tracked several for buddies who couldn't find a blood trail. ONLY one of mine didn't have a trail and needed tracking..., and that was because he was juiced on adrenaline when he crossed over to the property where I was waiting, and my hit cut the abdominal aorta, so blood wasn't going anywhere but into the chest cavity... yet adrenaline gave him enough before he dropped to go a pretty good distance.
I use a shoulder or a double lung shot, and most are double lung, round ball, pass through, and the deer are within site of where they were standing when they were hit. Farthest shot was 110 yards. I don't try for the heart because it's tasty... I want to pressure cook it and eat it.....
Some folks are not that good at tracking, I didn't start out very good, and some miss one or two fundamentals. So there IS a blood trail, but they don't see it.
For the deer I've had to track for folks, what I saw was....
a) Lack of finding the spot where the deer was shot. Usually the hunter under estimated the distance, or lost perspective when he left the location from where he fired. I always take a cheap, polyester, knit, blaze orange hat with me and hang it high at the spot where I was when I fired, to allow me to look back and help judge how far I've walked when going up to the spot where the deer was hit.
b) Lack of patience. Wait at least ten minutes (20 is better) before going to pick up a deer that you can't already see is down. IF for some reason the wound was mortal but not quickly incapacitating..., the deer will move when you come walking up, and by then it's moving when it's now low on blood....
c) Don't assume the blood trail will be "on the ground". I helped a friend track a deer in minutes when I pointed out the blood trail was on the bushes in copious amounts about 18" above the ground. Very very little was reaching the soil.
d) Understand that deer when hit well will take the least difficult path for them, but they are shorter than humans, and sometimes will double back on the path they used leading up to where they were hit. If you hunt in overgrown areas, you may need to track while crawling a bit....,
e) Have an accurate load and practice with it then be confident. Two of the deer that I've tracked that friends hit with modern cartridge rifles were poor hits, as the store bought ammo didn't work well in their rifles. When they corrected this they started to get BANG-flop results. Another friend with a muzzleloader had a very accurate round, practiced a lot over the summer, and shot the deer at about 60 yards. He called me after three hours and ranging far and wide..., so I began with (a) above, and he had missed doing that, and then concentrated on the deer being within 40 yards of that spot..., I found it crawled up under a honeysuckle bush... he had walked past it several times that day.... see (c) and (d).
f) A buck will often go a bit farther than a doe when hit, if it doesn't drop within sight of the spot where it was hit.
AND just to show I'm not an expert or such... most of what I've learned was from screwing up and discovering what I did wrong..., the ones I tracked for friends were during the past few years, not when I was beginning.
I got better by reading
The Still Hunter by Theodore Van Dyke. His observations on deer behavior when it's hit are excellent and also on how to move through the woods.
LD