mchughcb
Well-Known Member
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I do take a lot of neck and head shots, IF I am confident in whats presented. It has never been because of meat damage concerns, it's to stop Sika running off into thick forestry making recovery difficult, especially on last light,
Above are photos that show what can just was easily go wrong with a chest shot. I get fed up to be honest when I hear folk decrying neck/head shots as they OFTEN go wrong.....apparently. Well I've had to track and find a lot more chest shot deer than those who have been attempted with neck shots.
I'm also fed up finding deer with a bullet through their snout, or their jaws blown off. Quite frankly its the "professionals" using light calibre guns that seem to be the main culprits. Whilst a chest shot can turn out to be a liver shot, a good 220-400gr projectile is going to make sure that the animal will succumb. The vital area for killing a deer is larger in the heart/lung/spine and it is less mobile than it is for the brain or the neck. If the calibre you are using isn't stopping them quickly time to re-assess the calibre, and the projectiles.
