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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
How not, to use a 6.5 creedmoor
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<blockquote data-quote="Alibiiv" data-source="post: 1601609" data-attributes="member: 69192"><p>Well I cannot comment on finding a three-legged elk that has been shot with an arrow, however I can tell you about a deer that I did shoot in Vermont one year. 75 yards away, standing broadside, 30-06 in the shoulder! Deer went down like it was hit with lightning and it rolled backwards over the berm where I shot it. Very confident with the shot, put my gear together and started walking towards the deer, I figured I was done hunting! As I approached the deer it got up and ran into the woods before I could get off a shot, but.....it was running funny and on three legs. So now I'm tracking a deer dragging one leg and no blood!! It was pretty simple until the deer went into a swampy bogg where a lot of deer had passed through and all trails leaving the bogg were muddy and well traveled. A couple of days later I cut the track of that deer again because it snowed (the left leg was dragging) but I never saw it again that season, we named the deer Bigfoot. For two years we hunted him, on the third year I shot Bigfoot! The first year that I shot that deer I'd whacked my rifle, the scope was off, instead of hitting the right shoulder that was facing me the shot grazed the left shoulder deep and severed muscles.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Alibiiv, post: 1601609, member: 69192"] Well I cannot comment on finding a three-legged elk that has been shot with an arrow, however I can tell you about a deer that I did shoot in Vermont one year. 75 yards away, standing broadside, 30-06 in the shoulder! Deer went down like it was hit with lightning and it rolled backwards over the berm where I shot it. Very confident with the shot, put my gear together and started walking towards the deer, I figured I was done hunting! As I approached the deer it got up and ran into the woods before I could get off a shot, but.....it was running funny and on three legs. So now I’m tracking a deer dragging one leg and no blood!! It was pretty simple until the deer went into a swampy bogg where a lot of deer had passed through and all trails leaving the bogg were muddy and well traveled. A couple of days later I cut the track of that deer again because it snowed (the left leg was dragging) but I never saw it again that season, we named the deer Bigfoot. For two years we hunted him, on the third year I shot Bigfoot! The first year that I shot that deer I’d whacked my rifle, the scope was off, instead of hitting the right shoulder that was facing me the shot grazed the left shoulder deep and severed muscles. [/QUOTE]
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How not, to use a 6.5 creedmoor
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