The Taboo Subject. Loosing deer after the shot.
Its happened to me a few times. The shot looks good, climb down to check the arrow, follow the blood then the blood trail becomes less and less until its impossible to follow. Search until dark, grid search the next day, nothing. So I start to think, what went wrong. Did not wait long enough, broadhead hit bone, arrow hit a twig, gut shot, deer jumped the string, etc.
I have noticed an uptick on this point on the YouTube postings related to finding deer after the shot so I will summarize my related findings:
- Ranch Fairy (he picked that name!) stated in one post he was losing 50% of shot deer in his discussion around expandable vs fixed broadhead.
- Seans outdoors advised not to use expendables due to penetration problems.
- Death by bunjie shows (in an unscientific test) broad head penetration can depend on arrow speed (expendables favour higher speeds).
- Whitetail Habitat Solutions addressed this by saying wait 5 hours before the search starts unless you see the deer drop dead.
- Hunting the public had a tracking dog handler who stated the biggest mistake was poor shot placement.
- Almost ALL advise a LOW shot due to deer jumping the string, also to note a low shot will produce a better blood trail otherwise the lungs fill with blood and if the deer does not die quick it does not leave a trail (as in my case this happened twice).
Of the methods discussed, there seems to be a consensus of opinions:
Fixed blades
Shoot Low (aim at heart)
Wait 5 hours before tracking
Use a tracking dog
On the note of a tracking dog, the Big Game Blood Trackers of Ontario has some on standby (at least when I called last), but there seems to a be shortage of tracking dogs on the West side of Toronto (Burlington-Hamilton). Almost any dog can be trained to follow blood as its in their nature. It takes a few months of training to get up to a deployable level but dogs usually learn the 'game' in the first three or four sessions. If anyone is interested in starting a dog or training on blood trails PM me if you are close to Burlington for some friendly no cost sessions using the method of your choice, or the Kocher method (what I use), I have trained a bloodhound to level two trailing using NASAR standards and hold TD title.