I got two deer this year, a ten point buck with a shot in the spine from 145 yards and a doe shot in the neck while running at 190 yards. These were both very quick shots with not alot of time to get set and ready.
Lifting is easy, hitting a deer in the neck at close to 200 while running and shooting offhand is hard.
meh, try running that fucker down and nailing it with a spear like our ancestors did, then i will be impressed.
jk, nice buck, where i grew up in the southeast, deer hunting was an obsession with most of the guys i knew. i never really understood the appeal, but then again, most of those rednecks never understood my obsession with big booty black women, so to each his own i guess.
[quote]heavythrower wrote:
meh, try running that fucker down and nailing it with a spear like our ancestors did, then i will be impressed.
jk, nice buck, where i grew up in the southeast, deer hunting was an obsession with most of the guys i knew. i never really understood the appeal, but then again, most of those rednecks never understood my obsession with big booty black women, so to each his own I guess. [/quote]
Those ancestors didn’t do it alone, hahaha! The hunted in packs.
Here’s the obsession. Deer meat is very tasty and it’s so clean tasting. No preservatives or hormones, just bunches of tasty deer meat!
[quote]tom63 wrote:
I got two deer this year, a ten point buck with a shot in the spine from 145 yards and a doe shot in the neck while running at 190 yards. These were both very quick shots with not alot of time to get set and ready.
[/quote]
Sorry, thought you were on about some kinda Counter-Strike mod or something. Not many deers in London. Now cyclists…
[quote]Neebone wrote:
tom63 wrote:
I got two deer this year, a ten point buck with a shot in the spine from 145 yards and a doe shot in the neck while running at 190 yards. These were both very quick shots with not alot of time to get set and ready.
Sorry, thought you were on about some kinda Counter-Strike mod or something. Not many deers in London. Now cyclists…
[/quote]
Hahahaha! this thread was at first in the strength section and I guess it was to brag up lifting accomplishments. There’s always someone that can lift more, but you don’t always get a shot at a ten pointer, or make a shot like I did on the doe.
I got two women last week, a two point doe with a shot just below the base of the spine and a doe shot in the face and neck while lying down at .33 yards. These were both very quick shots with plenty of time to get set and ready.[/quote]
[quote]tom63 wrote:
I got two deer this year, a ten point buck with a shot in the spine from 145 yards and a doe shot in the neck while running at 190 yards. These were both very quick shots with not alot of time to get set and ready.
Lifting is easy, hitting a deer in the neck at close to 200 while running and shooting offhand is hard.[/quote]
Hit my Bull Elk moving (not all out running) at 160 yards with iron sights (peep sights) with a fifty cal. muzzleloader. First shot lunged him and he stopped at 170 getting ready to drop. Reloaded and hit em again in the shoulder and dropped him flat.
Used my 243 during a later season to drop my little buck with a spine shot at 100 yards.
One time I hit a bird while driving on the highway, didn’t know what the fuck it was at the time, but when I parked and looked there was a little fucking bird stuck in the grill. That is way smaller than a 10 point buck, so therefore way harder and cooler.
[quote]swivel wrote:
a running animal does not make for tasty eating. i suppose you can still make jerkey but i would let it go.[/quote]
That can be somewhat true especially if an animal is wounded and runs for miles, but it isn’t iron clad assurance an animals meat will be bad if it was running when taken. If that were the case hunters would be wasting tons of animals killed every year thrown away because the animal was running when shot.
[quote]swivel wrote:
a running animal does not make for tasty eating. i suppose you can still make jerkey but i would let it go.[/quote]
That’s good to know. I hit a deer with my truck. I just grazed it, but Yo Daddy wanted me to stop so he could try to get a few shots in. I didn’t stop, so now he keeps reminding me, in front of other people, that I killed Bambi, and it was a horrible, slow and painful death.
[quote]Dedicated wrote:
tom63 wrote:
I got two deer this year, a ten point buck with a shot in the spine from 145 yards and a doe shot in the neck while running at 190 yards. These were both very quick shots with not alot of time to get set and ready.
Lifting is easy, hitting a deer in the neck at close to 200 while running and shooting offhand is hard.
Hit my Bull Elk moving (not all out running) at 160 yards with iron sights (peep sights) with a fifty cal. muzzleloader. First shot lunged him and he stopped at 170 getting ready to drop. Reloaded and hit em again in the shoulder and dropped him flat.
Used my 243 during a later season to drop my little buck with a spine shot at 100 yards.
D[/quote]
Great shooting Dedicated. Have you done a lot of muzzleloader shooting and hunting? My dad does it, but I’ve never tried.