User Panel
Posted: 3/28/2006 11:01:16 AM EDT
Nice young bloke.
Just came to tell me that he was going to shoot a deer that somebody had hit on the road. The deer had limped onto my property next to the road and was thrashing around in pain and needed to be dispatched. Said that if I heard gunshots not to worry. Boom Boom Boom Three pistol shots. So much for a quick dispatch! |
|
One round for the deer, the others are for the two dogs tied up in your yard ETA, someone beat me to it. |
|
|
Depends on the ammo being used. When we were issued subsonic ammo it always took multiple rounds to put a deer down. Maybe the animal was thrashing around and he couldn't get a clear shot. |
|
|
Probably just had 9mm, a .45 would have done it in one.........
|
|
When in doubt, shoot again. When I start shooting at an animal, I shoot till it falls.
|
|
yea. Better to dump two extra into him and stop the thrashing. you can kill a deer with one shot but not instantaneously after they have been hit and the adrenaline is up. not without a head shot and that is hard on a thrashing deer.
|
|
We found a poor deer who had broken her back falling off a cliff near the Thousand Islands (in fact I found her tracks up to the cliff edge and saw her hoof marks where she tried to save herself later that day when I passed by the same area) She was sort of going in circles on her front legs and her back legs were no longer working. One of the guys with us, a cop actually and a good shot, decided to kill her with his muzzleloader. Just as he fired she moved, and the round went through her neck, but did not kill her. We ended up having to grab her and slit her throat. I could see him shooting a deer in the head with a 9mm and it did not penetrate the skull, but glanced off and travelled aroudn the edge of the skull or something. I've never shot a person. Thank God, but I have not been impressed with pistols when I have seen animals shot with them. |
||
|
I have had to kill two deer that were hit and badly wounded on the side of the road. One with a 7.62x39mm, and the other with a .357mag.
|
|
I've finished off 2 does with a .40 Single headshots from 5 feet.
|
|
Last one I put down was with a .38 SW 642ti, loaded with +p Starfire JHP. One shot did it.
|
|
I had a rapid skunk in my yard a few summers ago. Called the PD and the animal control officer showed up along with a Patrolman and a rookie. They decide that the rookie will have to shoot the skunk. So here we are 4 grown men and 1 little skunk. I offered the use of my Colt MT but they declined. It took them 4 shots to kill the skunk. Anyway I got to bury it!
|
|
He actually used his gun! The good ol boys I hunt with in Missouri found a doe that had been impaled on a fence post. They did not want to shoot her, but the did have a 10lb sledge in the truck! One guy held the ears and the other guy WHACK! one blow to the head and it was all over.
|
|
Dang... please oh God don't ever let me meet up with a rapid skunk. Do rapid skunks get more thrusts per squeeze? |
|
|
Sounds like he was professional and above board. Nice of him to alert you.
|
|
Ban rapid skunks, for the children. |
||
|
Maybe witnessing the recoil scared it to death? |
|
|
On skunks its best to kill them the first shot. If they get pissed off you do not want to be the one to bury it. |
|
|
It took me a while to get that one. I have too much German in me. |
|
|
Should have offered him the use of a rifle or shotgun.
I wouldn't relish putting a large animal down with a pistol. |
|
I use the shotty with birdshot for the skunks. Stand off distance with those is important unless they are so sick that you can just walk right up to them. I wind up shooting a deer at least every other week. Its good for ammo rotation, if nothing else. |
||
|
Finished off my buck this year with my Makarov. It took two shots with Barnhaul JHP to the head.
|
|
A .22 rimfire pistol is all you need to put a lot of animals down, its all about shot placement. I grew up on a farm and have butchered a variety of different animals. I have witnessed a large boar hog take a shot between the eyes with a .40 and all it did was knock the boar down DID NOT penetrate the skull one bit. Same hog was dispached with a single .22LR shot from directly behind the ear at a downward/inward angle to the center of the brain.
Admitedly it could be hard to get perfect shot placement on a wounded animal that is thrashing about on the ground. |
|
How far away were you? |
|
|
2 of the best parts of the deer, esp the Backstrap...... Not all roadkill is mashed to the point of being un salvagable. In this case since the deer was still alive, then shot, parts of it could have been stil good to go, so to speak. No sense in wasting good deer. |
||
|
There is a list that folks can get on to get RK moose up here. mm mm tastey |
|||
|
Im confused Because atleast In MI backstrap and tenderloins are the same thing |
|||
|
That's cause when you hit them going fast enough they get all mashed together. |
||||
|
Ran pretty fast while you were trying to shoot it? Hell I'ld run fast if 4 guys were trying to shoot me. |
|
|
Here is your free medical advice for the day: NEVER touch a rabid animal. People have gotten rabies from handling the carcasses of rabid animals. Carry on. |
|
|
I thought they had doomsday devices so that they automatically go off when they die? |
||
|
BACKSTRAP: The two loooong strips of meat that run dorsally along either side of the backbone, in beef it is analogous to the the meat from whence we get ribeyes and strip steaks.
TENDERLOIN: The much, much smaller two strips of meat that run along the ventral side of the spinal cord, farther back on the last 1/3 or the backbone. In beef it is analogous to the meat from whence we get filets. Every deer I've had to dispatch on the road has been with a .22LR. A few went down with minor twitching, but some started crappie floppin' something fierce and I've had to shoot 'em a few more times to calm 'em down. Probably didn't have to, but I hate just standing around watching such a magnificent critter jumping around like a brain-shot cat. |
|
I have to say, in life-- This guy has taught me, "There is always an excuse". |
||
|
Backstrap runs along the backbone or spine of the deer. Tenderloins are on the belly side of the backbone or spine. |
||||
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.