112Savage
AH veteran
Unfortunately I wasn't the lucky hunter to get him lol. I cant seem to find the picture of him after he was killed. If memory serves me he had about the same rack but with more mass at the antler base.That’s something!! What kind of rack did he grow after the injury and what did the wound look like when he was killed?
There's a popular idea that gets floated around from time to time here and on other hunting Internet sites. The basic idea is that for deer or antelope, there is a space below the spine and above the vitals where an animal can be shot without causing significant damage. I've wandered around enough animal carcasses to know that no such space exists! I'm not a thoracic trauma surgeon or neurosurgeon, but I am a surgeon and have spent many fine hours working on the spine. I know a thing or two about terminal ballistics and what brings about the demise of an animal.
Curious if you have any opinions on the impact of a shot that hits over the spine, but clips the spinous processes.
Incapacitating for an animal? Is enough energy transfered down to the vertebrae to pinch or sever the spinal cord?
The most common thing to happen is that the animal drops immediately, stunned from the shot.
Many hunters and some guides will then begin celebrating.
The hunters are usually shocked when the animal then gets up and runs away and is never found again.
Real world experience, no it is not incapacitating. I was lucky I was able to get a second shot into him to finish the job. Extreme downhill shot bullet broke off the bone projecting upward. It did keep him down long enough for me to get closer for the next shot.Curious if you have any opinions on the impact of a shot that hits over the spine, but clips the spinous processes.
Incapacitating for an animal? Is enough energy transfered down to the vertebrae to pinch or sever the spinal cord?
I meant more if he had any conclusions about it: A shot 'in the area' stuns, and the animal recovers and bolts, but a shot which hits the processes is enough to sever the spinal cord and anchor the animal.
I don't know enough about spinal injuries, or neck shots I suppose.
It depends.Curious if you have any opinions on the impact of a shot that hits over the spine, but clips the spinous processes.
Incapacitating for an animal? Is enough energy transfered down to the vertebrae to pinch or sever the spinal cord?
Well ok, if you can admit that then I can tell about something not even my family knows about. I shot a deer near the gate on a ranch on the way out. It shocked the spinal process evidently because I drove over, swung it into the trunk of a car I was driving, and then stopped to take a leak. Before I finished, the darn deer got out of the car trunk, over the fence and gone. (embarrassing) I was barely out of school at the time....still would have never lived it down had I told about it.There was a beautiful 6x6 elk in arizona that took 2 300wm bullets from me in "no mans land". A week later he was back on camera in same area. He was killed following season healthy as ever. He dropped on the shot, we celebrated, he stood up, dropped on 2nd shot again, stood up third time and was gone.
Well ok, if you can admit that then I can tell about something not even my family knows about. I shot a deer near the gate on a ranch on the way out. It shocked the spinal process evidently because I drove over, swung it into the trunk of a car I was driving, and then stopped to take a leak. Before I finished, the darn deer got out of the car trunk, over the fence and gone. (embarrassing) I was barely out of school at the time....still would have never lived it down had I told about it.
The last deer my Grandfather shot was a barely legal (for our area) 8 point with his 30-30. Shot the buck in almost the exact same spot this arrow is sitting. Deer dropped in his tracks and Grandpa kept his seat because it was cold and drizzling if I remember correctly. Said about ten minutes later the buck jumps up and takes off. Him and my Dad look for a while but find no sign to track.These pictures are from my personal trail camera. They are from the 2022 season. Looks like the deer jumped the string a bit would be my guess. This Buck was finally killed this past season by the same hunter who put the arrow in it
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