I dont know what I did

jethro66

CGN Regular
Rating - 100%
1   0   0
Location
Newmarket Ont.
Please kick me!!! I had a Doe commit to me from 25 yards to 50 feet and I still missed!! Fired 4 times and 2 were in the 50 ft. range and the deer stopped 2 times..Still had time to change the magazine and was on the lowest power setting..Caliber 7mm. Rem. Mag..Rifle set to 100 yards and used factory ammo..
 
Probably thought you were aiming but were lifting your head to look at the deer when you pulled the trigger. That's a common mistake. Follow through with a rifle is every bit as important as with a shotgun wingshooting. It is just a different kind of follow through.
 
It can't be a gun issue... Even a bumped scope would not be that far off at 25... It happens... I wager you got excited and did something stupid... Been there done that in my youth..
 
Bumped scope?

If I was OP I would be heading to the range to confirm everything is still sighted in properly. Check all rings, mounts, etc.


Doe fever?

If OP had time to shoot 4 times before the deer ran off it must have been a pretty frantic affair, some deer fever is very possible.


Should have jumped out of the stand and clubbed it with the empty, smoking gun.

That's what the SKS has a bayonet for!:D


Mark
 
Are you the new owner of this:

http://www.canadiangunnutz.com/forum/showthread.php/988536-It-s-Sold!!!!!!!



IMG_2604_zps3f9f0a4d.jpg










IMG_2605_zps32597983.jpg
 
Ha ha !!!Winchester model 70 xtr sporter early 90s ..Bausch and Lomb elite 4000 scope.sighted it in last year haven't touched it since..I was shooting up hill in a ground blind..Blue Mountian area..
 
Probably thought you were aiming but were lifting your head to look at the deer when you pulled the trigger. That's a common mistake. Follow through with a rifle is every bit as important as with a shotgun wingshooting. It is just a different kind of follow through.
Hmm..Great points I have shot ducks that close but deer with a rifle has been greater then 70 yards in my experience..
 
Sometimes when in the excitement of the hunt, we don't see the cross hair in the scope when aiming. It is as if we are looking through a monocular. Our natural tendency is to put the target in the centre of the picture, but all it takes is to be off a bit and it's a miss. I have a 1/5th of a minute crosshair on one of my old scopes, and while it was great on a rifle set up for shooting gophers from a prone position, shooting at a whitetail was a different story,I don't think I ever actually laid the crosshairs where I wanted to hit it. More of a centre, shoot, and pray.
 
Back
Top Bottom