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<blockquote data-quote="HOSS" data-source="post: 1200991" data-attributes="member: 1863"><p>As an avid hunter and a serious bow hunter I have seen about every archery shot scenario imaginable. I have probably taken in the neighborhood of 75 deer with a bow along with elk, bear and hogs. Arrows can be very deadly in terms of terminal performance. Arrows kill by massive hemorrhage where bullets kill by shock and tissue damage. A bow shot deer (double lung hit) that runs 100 yards after the hit will usually die almost as fast as a bullet shot deer they just do not have that shock factor that shuts down their nervous system. A bow shot deer can cover that 100 yards in about 6 or 7 seconds. The massive amounts of blood that rushes to their vitals causes the brain to have none. Blood pressure goes to zero and they basically pass out and die. All of this happens in a few seconds of time. I have shot deer that ran 100 yards or better into an open field or open woods and I have witnessed this many times. However, most bow kills take place in thick woods were the archer does not see the deer fall and the blood trail is required to find the deer. The big problems are guys taking low percentage shots, expandable broad heads, shooting too far, dull broad heads, untuned set-ups, arrows that wobble like crazy when spun, dependence upon technology instead of skill and the worst......too lazy to spend the time to truly work out a blood trail. I have seen several guys give up on a blood trail and call me only to have me find the perfectly hit deer 80 to 100 yards away in a different direction that they swear the deer took after the shot. A deer hit through the lungs (note plural) or heart with a fixed blade, razor sharp broad head, will bleed and die quickly no exceptions. I hate expandable heads.....the vast majority of the deer that I have trailed and not found for people in the last 15 years were shot with expandable heads that failed. Archery equipment is VERY effective at killing.......many bow hunters are not.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HOSS, post: 1200991, member: 1863"] As an avid hunter and a serious bow hunter I have seen about every archery shot scenario imaginable. I have probably taken in the neighborhood of 75 deer with a bow along with elk, bear and hogs. Arrows can be very deadly in terms of terminal performance. Arrows kill by massive hemorrhage where bullets kill by shock and tissue damage. A bow shot deer (double lung hit) that runs 100 yards after the hit will usually die almost as fast as a bullet shot deer they just do not have that shock factor that shuts down their nervous system. A bow shot deer can cover that 100 yards in about 6 or 7 seconds. The massive amounts of blood that rushes to their vitals causes the brain to have none. Blood pressure goes to zero and they basically pass out and die. All of this happens in a few seconds of time. I have shot deer that ran 100 yards or better into an open field or open woods and I have witnessed this many times. However, most bow kills take place in thick woods were the archer does not see the deer fall and the blood trail is required to find the deer. The big problems are guys taking low percentage shots, expandable broad heads, shooting too far, dull broad heads, untuned set-ups, arrows that wobble like crazy when spun, dependence upon technology instead of skill and the worst......too lazy to spend the time to truly work out a blood trail. I have seen several guys give up on a blood trail and call me only to have me find the perfectly hit deer 80 to 100 yards away in a different direction that they swear the deer took after the shot. A deer hit through the lungs (note plural) or heart with a fixed blade, razor sharp broad head, will bleed and die quickly no exceptions. I hate expandable heads.....the vast majority of the deer that I have trailed and not found for people in the last 15 years were shot with expandable heads that failed. Archery equipment is VERY effective at killing.......many bow hunters are not. [/QUOTE]
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