Come on BIGREDD, how many animals suffer headshot wounds as opposed the the ones which have had their guts blown out. Shooting at running deer and risking gut shooting an animal seems to be an accepted practice by some people. A gut shot animal doesn't look as terrible as a headshot wound so that might by why it is an acceptable risk to some people.
The guy who shot that deer didn't know #### about head shots and should be taken out and publicly flogged. If you are going to make a headshot you must imagine a line from the ear to the corner of the eye and then drop a line straight down from the base of the antler and where the two lines intersect is where the bullet goes. I usually put the crosshairs right in the ear and them move toward the eye and touch off.(Come on BIGREDD, give me a Captian Deadly). On a frontal shot right between the eyes and they turn off like a switch. If you can't shoot that accurately in a hunting situation then you better not be taking headshots.
I have never wounded an animal with a head or neck shot, they all dropped where they stood but then again I am usually shooting at fifty yards or less.
The guy who shot that deer didn't know #### about head shots and should be taken out and publicly flogged. If you are going to make a headshot you must imagine a line from the ear to the corner of the eye and then drop a line straight down from the base of the antler and where the two lines intersect is where the bullet goes. I usually put the crosshairs right in the ear and them move toward the eye and touch off.(Come on BIGREDD, give me a Captian Deadly). On a frontal shot right between the eyes and they turn off like a switch. If you can't shoot that accurately in a hunting situation then you better not be taking headshots.
I have never wounded an animal with a head or neck shot, they all dropped where they stood but then again I am usually shooting at fifty yards or less.




















































