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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
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<blockquote data-quote="nicholasjohn" data-source="post: 1714894" data-attributes="member: 109113"><p>They look to me like they're all legs, and the legs are a long way from the chest cavity. They probably take a long time to run out of gas after you ventilate their boiler room. I think that some animals are wired differently than others, and kangaroos may be in the same boat as the eastern whitetails I grew up on. They were pretty high strung, and if they were running when I shot them, they usually just kept right on running. If they were standing there completely unaware, they would fall right down at the shot, but any that were all keyed up had to run a hundred yards or so to figure out that they were done for the day. The nervous condition of the animal at the time of the shot counts for a lot. The adrenaline effect is often amazing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nicholasjohn, post: 1714894, member: 109113"] They look to me like they're all legs, and the legs are a long way from the chest cavity. They probably take a long time to run out of gas after you ventilate their boiler room. I think that some animals are wired differently than others, and kangaroos may be in the same boat as the eastern whitetails I grew up on. They were pretty high strung, and if they were running when I shot them, they usually just kept right on running. If they were standing there completely unaware, they would fall right down at the shot, but any that were all keyed up had to run a hundred yards or so to figure out that they were done for the day. The nervous condition of the animal at the time of the shot counts for a lot. The adrenaline effect is often amazing. [/QUOTE]
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