100% yes. Always wait for a brain shot. Look at some Anatomy pictures online to see exactly where the brain lies
Get one into the right spot, and your .22 is plenty. Always aim for the exit hole...
Well said.
This sounds so clever and that it might be a lesson lost on the slow, which means me. Can you explain what you mean here? I never hunted anything except for about a week and a half ago, so any little emphasis on the bleeding obvious is far from wasted, thanks.
Also, I very much enjoy the fact that the OP used the term "delete" to describe killing a woodchuck. Very much tickles my funny bone for some odd reason.
100% yes. Always wait for a brain shot. Look at some Anatomy pictures online to see exactly where the brain lies
Get one into the right spot, and your .22 is plenty. Always aim for the exit hole...
Well said.
This sounds so clever and that it might be a lesson lost on the slow, which means me. Can you explain what you mean here? I never hunted anything except for about a week and a half ago, so any little emphasis on the bleeding obvious is far from wasted, thanks.
And here I thought he meant a Texas heart shot..
My point here is that the attitude of "NEVER!" release a trapped animal elsewhere is more opinion than fact or requirement.
My point here is that the attitude of "NEVER!" release a trapped animal elsewhere is more opinion than fact or requirement.
Except when it's not.
It's on Oregon's Department of Fish and Wildlife site.
100% yes. Always wait for a brain shot. Look at some Anatomy pictures online to see exactly where the brain lies
Get one into the right spot, and your .22 is plenty. Always aim for the exit hole...
Well said.
This sounds so clever and that it might be a lesson lost on the slow, which means me. Can you explain what you mean here? I never hunted anything except for about a week and a half ago, so any little emphasis on the bleeding obvious is far from wasted, thanks.
And here I thought he meant a Texas heart shot..
Welp the nice thing about thinking where the pellet will exit your target is that it puts the entire path of the pellet through the animal in your mind. Often times you pick a spot of the side facing you and forget to take into consideration the exact position of the critter. When you consider the whole path of the pellet you eliminate a lot of those sorts of mistakes. Most times you don't get a perfect side on or head on shot, some times you do.