One of the best things about hunting is I always learn something.
I shot a small buck just before dark (about 15 minutes before the end of legal shoot) this year at about 200 yards during the rifle hunt in Ontario. It felt like a good shot, but when I got to where the buck had been, I could not find any blood trail at all. The deer was about 30 yards from the edge of the woods when I shot, and ran into the woods after the shot. I spent about 15 minutes looking for sign in the field and at the edge of the woods. No blood anywhere. It was now DARK and I was starting to question if I had hit the deer or not.
To make a long story short, I did find the deer about 50 yards into the bush. The deer ran in a straight line along a nice wide trail and died there - probably 10 seconds after I shot him. It was dark enough when I shot that I couldn't tell that he had been partly facing me. The bullet entered just behind the shoulder but because he was slightly facing me punctured the diaphragm before exiting the other side. Neither hole was very big, and they were high enough in the body that combined with the punctured diaphragm the blood just pooled in the lungs and abdominal cavity. Hence zero blood trail.
If I wasn't confident in my shot I might have left that deer in the woods. That plus I knew that another guy that hunts the same property had lost a wounded deer earlier in the week, and there was no way I was going to have the landowner find another dead deer.
Anyway, the point of my story is that you can rarely be 100% sure that you missed a deer clean - so keep looking even when you are ready to give up.
I shot a small buck just before dark (about 15 minutes before the end of legal shoot) this year at about 200 yards during the rifle hunt in Ontario. It felt like a good shot, but when I got to where the buck had been, I could not find any blood trail at all. The deer was about 30 yards from the edge of the woods when I shot, and ran into the woods after the shot. I spent about 15 minutes looking for sign in the field and at the edge of the woods. No blood anywhere. It was now DARK and I was starting to question if I had hit the deer or not.
To make a long story short, I did find the deer about 50 yards into the bush. The deer ran in a straight line along a nice wide trail and died there - probably 10 seconds after I shot him. It was dark enough when I shot that I couldn't tell that he had been partly facing me. The bullet entered just behind the shoulder but because he was slightly facing me punctured the diaphragm before exiting the other side. Neither hole was very big, and they were high enough in the body that combined with the punctured diaphragm the blood just pooled in the lungs and abdominal cavity. Hence zero blood trail.
If I wasn't confident in my shot I might have left that deer in the woods. That plus I knew that another guy that hunts the same property had lost a wounded deer earlier in the week, and there was no way I was going to have the landowner find another dead deer.
Anyway, the point of my story is that you can rarely be 100% sure that you missed a deer clean - so keep looking even when you are ready to give up.


















































