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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Do you want a exit wound????
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<blockquote data-quote="Sasquatch" data-source="post: 74875" data-attributes="member: 3992"><p>I have successfully hunted with archery, pistol and rifle. The last elk I shot was a high shoulder shot at 350 and he dropped instantly then got up again while I was walking to him. The follow up heart shot dropped him for good. Both bullets stayed in the animal and it was a successfull hunt. the cow I shot the year before was a heart shot with a total pass through at 400 yards and she dropped instantly, another successfull hunt. The antelope that fall was killed with the bow, quartering away at 24 yards. The arrow hit the offside shoulder, dislocated it and snapped. The buck ran 30 feet and dropped with liquid lungs and a free floating heart. the doe I shot the next day was a pass through broadside shot with the bow and she dropped 20 yards away from where she was originally hit. The next fall I shot a yearling antelope buck with the .44 mag super blackhawk with iron sights at about 55 yards, quartering away. I shot about 3" left of where I wanted, and the bullet entered right in the left pit and exiting just in front of the right shoulder. he ran about 50 yards and rolled. The lungs wer nothing but a bloody goo. Yet another sucess.</p><p></p><p>All very sucessfull hunts with and without pass through shots fired with rifle, pistol and bow. I don't have as much experience as others on this sight, but I don't really care where the lead ends up, as long as point of impact is where I wanted it and it goes into the vitals, including the lungs that are behind that shoulder so many of you are talking about. So far I have been lucky and not had to follow anything more than 50 paces from where I shoot them. I believe this is strictly due to my familiarity with my equipment and only taking shots I know will hit where I want them to.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sasquatch, post: 74875, member: 3992"] I have successfully hunted with archery, pistol and rifle. The last elk I shot was a high shoulder shot at 350 and he dropped instantly then got up again while I was walking to him. The follow up heart shot dropped him for good. Both bullets stayed in the animal and it was a successfull hunt. the cow I shot the year before was a heart shot with a total pass through at 400 yards and she dropped instantly, another successfull hunt. The antelope that fall was killed with the bow, quartering away at 24 yards. The arrow hit the offside shoulder, dislocated it and snapped. The buck ran 30 feet and dropped with liquid lungs and a free floating heart. the doe I shot the next day was a pass through broadside shot with the bow and she dropped 20 yards away from where she was originally hit. The next fall I shot a yearling antelope buck with the .44 mag super blackhawk with iron sights at about 55 yards, quartering away. I shot about 3" left of where I wanted, and the bullet entered right in the left pit and exiting just in front of the right shoulder. he ran about 50 yards and rolled. The lungs wer nothing but a bloody goo. Yet another sucess. All very sucessfull hunts with and without pass through shots fired with rifle, pistol and bow. I don't have as much experience as others on this sight, but I don't really care where the lead ends up, as long as point of impact is where I wanted it and it goes into the vitals, including the lungs that are behind that shoulder so many of you are talking about. So far I have been lucky and not had to follow anything more than 50 paces from where I shoot them. I believe this is strictly due to my familiarity with my equipment and only taking shots I know will hit where I want them to. [/QUOTE]
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