I got a few more grays today; two tiddlers and an adult.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6xuWzj_tLc

Edited to add commentary: 

The first squirrel was pretty straightforward. Just nailed 'm to the tree. It was a bit lower than I wanted to hit him, but all these shots are standing offhand at 10-15 yards, so I don't have that pinpoint precision. Still, it went in the right arm, through the clockwork, and out the belly. 

The second squirrel, (the adult) had a limb obstructing his head off and on, and if you watch closely in the slo-mo shot at the end, you can see I shot through a leaf to get him where I did. It was a spine shot, which I couldn't tell at the time, hence my trash-talking: "Hehe, yer not goin' anywhere." That's what I get for being a smarty-pants. Even though his hind quarters were missing in action, he still managed to turn around, climb up, hang there like a trapeze artist, and start to work his way back down. That's when I heard #3, and spotted him. I presumed #2 had a punctured lung and was bleeding out.

So I followed #3 and popped him. Kind of a back angle shot. Entered just behind the ribs on the right side, through the clockwork, and out the left arm. You KNOW a squirrel's in bad shape when he falls off a tree.

Then, I heard #2 hit the ground, and he was making a run for the border, dragging himself across the yard with just the fronts, toward the neighbor's. Can't let THAT happen! That's when I walked in front of the camera and plugged him in the neck. I assumed AGAIN that he was dead. But you could see in the video that he was still heaving. I was doing all that with the camera up to my eye, so I didn't notice. I put one more right down through the top of his skull off camera. 

I'm adding a couple pix: One of the three I got this morning, one of a squirrel I got earlier in the week, but forgot to roll video first. Too bad, it was a good shot, in one eye, and out the other side of the head, between the eye and ear. That guy just folded.