Re: Neck Shots, advantages, disadvantages
Learning to track a wounded animal is part of any type of hunting. I've seen well placed shots on small whitetails with rifles as large as a 300 WM result in a several hour tracking job. I have personally shot deer behind the shoulder with a bow and dropped them within a few steps of the impact. A creatures will to live can be remarkable, especially when they are wounded. Every hunter owes it to the game they pursue to make a lethal shot whether it be head, neck, shoulder, heart, lung, rifle, bow, shotgun, blackpowder doesn't make a difference. One shot isn't better than the other all the time, circumstance and the hunter make the difference. Personally I limit my shots with a bow to 45yds broadside and 30yds quartering away. No head on and no quartering to shots and never straight away. I know people can shoot them at 75yds, and some say 45yds is too much. That is what I feel comfortable with. With a rifle I don't get opportunities past 100yds usually. My rifle is setup to take advantage of that fact. I don't shoot at deer running mach II through the woods, trotting yes, if I feel I can easily make the shot. I don't shoot 200yds+ at them because I don't practice that shot as I feel it won't be needed in my area. I don't use super tough 30"+ penetrating bullets, because I don't want my bullet energy dumped into the ridge behind the deer. A nice copper jacketed soft point works just fine for our whitetails. Neck shots if that's all I have, usually within 50yds with a good rest on a calm and still deer. The deers attitude will dictate this. Most times I can wait for a nice behind the shoulder or in the shoulder heart lung shot and have a short if any tracking job. As a youth I made some stupid shots and some payed out and some fed the coyotes later. I regret those now that I am old enough to know better. If you hunt long enough and take enough shots on game animals, eventually one will get away from you. And if you are a good hunter, it will have exhausted you looking for it and kept you up all night worrying about it. If not, you're probably just a shooter and not a hunter. The main thing is to learn from mistakes both your own and others and give the animal every ounce of respect it deserves before, during, and after you pull the trigger.