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Hunters are the most detestable


Hunters are the most detestable

In just about one month deer murder season would begin and I would like all the decent public to know the deers death is NOT "quick" nor "humane" its a horrible slow terrifying death to majority of the hunted animals. *** Information that hunters do not want you to know is how many millions of deer they wound and cripple a year and how they use the blood and guts of the deer to track them down. Some hunters wait till the next day because it may take too long for the animals to die and hunters are too tired to look for them How to Track a Wounded Deer Guide To Trail the Deer with Its Blood Stains How to Handle a Gut Shot at bowsite.com http://bowsite.com/BOWSITE/features/articles/deer/gutshot/ Trailing Wounded Deer http://home.adelphia.net/~geffert/trail.htm Deer Search Inc. http://www.deersearch.org/ Tracking A Bow Shot Deer (and gun shot also) http://www.southernoutdoorproducts.com/other/tracking.htm Never give up. A story of wounded deer recovery. http://boondox.net/DCstory120806.html "Later investigation on mine revealed the shot had entered behind the last rib on one side and exited between the 5th and 6th on the other and lodged behind the shoulder. Like I have said before, some bucks just don't know how to die." At this spot, I found a tuft of hair which proved that I had hit the deer. Beyond the hair, I found two slivers of bone and a small piece of lung tissue. I identified one of these bone slivers as a piece of rib. The other I thought was a piece of a shoulder blade. This tentative identification of bone fragments was prompted by an effort to explain the lack of a discernible blood trail. (I was using a .38/55 rifle and the bullet from one of these guns usually leaves an exit wound which permits free bleeding.) About the only possible deductions I could make from the evidence at hand were that I had hit the deer high in the lung cavity that bleeding would be internal until that cavity filled and, since the lung had been pierced, the deer would die. I followed that deer from track to track, never leaving a known track until I had found the next one, with only an occasional drop of blood to assure me that I was on the right trail. After a two-hundred-yard trail I found blood enough to be seen from a standing position. When I reached that point, the deer lay dead about twenty feet farther on. After founding the tuft of hair, two slivers of bone and a small piece of lung tissue, I was convinced that I had hit the deer. This makes me think that I have hit the deer high in the lung cavity and the bleeding takes a little longer. After following the blood for about two hundred yard I found the deer lying dead. http://www.ggoutdoors.org/ezine/Vol2No4/blood.html Failure to recover bow killed deer is bowhunting's "Achilles Heel." Statistically too many bowhunters fail to find the animals they kill which in turn becomes dangerous ammunition in the arsenal of anti-hunting groups. When you take up the trail of a wounded deer, do so with an open mind, because there are misconceptions that can change the effectiveness of any trailing situation.

YouTube | September 11, 2008

Tags:. .information. .die. .season. .next. .shot











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