Warning: this may provoke a response from Bob Nelson...
Friend loses buck of a lifetime in Montana: Last week a friend passed up 7 bucks waiting for the monster seen on cameras. At last light, he appeared, but was surrounded by does. The only shot was a high chest shot, passing over the back of a smaller doe. He took the shot, hit the deer, and watched as it slowed from a run to a walk, then a stagger, and then a lay down in knee high grass, just short of the woods. It raised and lowered its head, and antlers could be seen, but the position for a shot was a guess. Range was about 160 yards. Rather than get its adrenalin up, they let it lay until morning and planned to find it right there.
That night it snowed. Deer had vanished in the night with any visible tracks or blood trail covered by snow. Searches were conducted even with outside help for three days. Buck not found. (no word whether dogs were employed) Son vowed to find the deer, father who shot it had to return to Graham, Texas. Buck was shot with a .243 Win.! Locals commented .243 was probably too light. Shot possibly went below spine, but shallow if at all into chest cavity proper. They all said that the same wound, but hit with a 300 Win mag, would probably have killed the buck, a massive, heavy racked 10 point in the best Montana tradition! "You can't kill them too dead" was the last comment offered. Shooter had elected not to take his 25'06 or 45-70...
Son called last night saying he found the deer...IT WAS STILL ALIVE, seen on two trail cams, limping around but eating. Will it make it though the winter? Should the son finish it off and him take "first blood" rights to the deer? Is it fair game, likely to be shot by another? Undecided.
The hunt was taken with the knowledge that this buck (+200 lbs) was the intended quarry. Comments?
Friend loses buck of a lifetime in Montana: Last week a friend passed up 7 bucks waiting for the monster seen on cameras. At last light, he appeared, but was surrounded by does. The only shot was a high chest shot, passing over the back of a smaller doe. He took the shot, hit the deer, and watched as it slowed from a run to a walk, then a stagger, and then a lay down in knee high grass, just short of the woods. It raised and lowered its head, and antlers could be seen, but the position for a shot was a guess. Range was about 160 yards. Rather than get its adrenalin up, they let it lay until morning and planned to find it right there.
That night it snowed. Deer had vanished in the night with any visible tracks or blood trail covered by snow. Searches were conducted even with outside help for three days. Buck not found. (no word whether dogs were employed) Son vowed to find the deer, father who shot it had to return to Graham, Texas. Buck was shot with a .243 Win.! Locals commented .243 was probably too light. Shot possibly went below spine, but shallow if at all into chest cavity proper. They all said that the same wound, but hit with a 300 Win mag, would probably have killed the buck, a massive, heavy racked 10 point in the best Montana tradition! "You can't kill them too dead" was the last comment offered. Shooter had elected not to take his 25'06 or 45-70...
Son called last night saying he found the deer...IT WAS STILL ALIVE, seen on two trail cams, limping around but eating. Will it make it though the winter? Should the son finish it off and him take "first blood" rights to the deer? Is it fair game, likely to be shot by another? Undecided.
The hunt was taken with the knowledge that this buck (+200 lbs) was the intended quarry. Comments?