Walking transects across the moor. 2m apart, stopping every 4 paces to scan under everything and watch the dog’s behaviour. She started indicating when we were about 30 yards out, but I didn’t see it til we were essentially standing on it.Great news! How on earth did you find it?
I have learned (or re learned) a lot from it.Unfortunately everyone will have a similar tale of woe every so often. These stalks are unfortunately the most memorable for all of the wrong reasons. But there are always lessons to be learned.
A picking-up trick, learned the hard way, is to take an obvious immovable mark further on, and in sightline from your present position, and your ‘bird’For the first time in a long while, I lost a deer that I knew to be dead. Extremely frustrating.
Head shot on a calm beast, facing away. Couched up in deep heather on more or less featureless moorland. One roe from a group of 3. Saw the top the skull disintegrate and it dropped to shot. Thrashed around on the ground and kicked itself over a little heathery bank so disappeared from view. Kept crosshairs on for 5 minutes, no further movement. Then made a series of stupid mistakes.
First mistake: Took my eye off the spot and turned to follow 2 other deer that had remained in the area. Decided not to shoot them - it was going to get dark soon, and I didn’t want to be extracting all 3 in the dark. Thought I knew where the first had gone down.
Second mistake: sublimely confident I knew where it was, I didn’t immediately go it it. Instead, went back to the truck (only 500m away) to offload rifle and get roe sack. Did mark where I’d shot from, with a direction indicator.
I then spent hours, first in failing light and then in the dark, walking all over the area trying to find it. The two other deer were still there, and hung around until I was almost on top of them. I had a clear view of the area in thermal, and could see the 2 on and off for the next hour - so I’m certain the ‘dead’ one was definitely still dead. I had a both dog and thermal. Several times the dog indicated a strong scent, but seemed to lose it again each time and then get distracted by the foot trace from the live ones.
I am absolutely certain it was stone dead, and that I must have walked within a yard or two of it multiple times. All I can think is that it kicked itself into a hidden gully, under some heather or into a hidden puddle.
This on top of a miss earlier in the day and a miss the day before. Just not a very good weekend![]()
Yes - very effective.A picking-up trick, learned the hard way, is to take an obvious immovable mark further on, and in sightline from your present position, and your ‘bird’
if you leave your position no worries, just return exactly and walk towards your mark, you cannot fail to walk over the ‘bird’, that’s assuming of course it’s not a runner.
Willowbank.
Funnily enough I came to the same conclusion many years ago.I have learned (or re learned) a lot from it.
It’s funny - I’ve only had a break of about a month, but feel extremely rusty indeed, with a lot of unforced, stupid errors.
I suppose it’s good to be reminded that you really do loose the edge quite quickly and can’t afford to be complacent.
Definitely a humbling few days.
My torch app on the phone has a crappy compass on it. Red points north and is very small. So I just pressed it and a 360degree compass appeared. Ffs. Never knew it was there. Live and learn. Will definitely use that.RF on Binos or thermal can be useful sometimes when coupled with the compass on a smart phone and an orange latex glove. Ping the range before shot, mark the bearing down the rifle barrel after the shot before you take it off the bipod or sticks then mark the shooting location with the glove on bush or tree or stick etc. Using the range and back bearing to the glove gets you within a few meters if you are precise with these things.
All that said hindsight is a wonderful thing.
Definitely and all the better if there are two marks that are aligned beyond your bird/deer as you can't or don't always walk in a straight line to pickupA picking-up trick, learned the hard way, is to take an obvious immovable mark further on, and in sightline from your present position, and your ‘bird’
if you leave your position no worries, just return exactly and walk towards your mark
Out of interest is the carcass edible?Yes - very effective.
Unfortunately, in this case, there was very gently rising ground behind for about 200m - slightly convex slope, so no hard horizon - just diffuse heather and rushes. And nothing in the distance beyond.
The one ‘hard’ landmark I thought I had was a clump of rushes midway between the firing point and the deer. Except there were more than one of these..
Out of interest is the carcass edible?
I dont think a delayed gralloch matters but if its not bled properly is the meat ruined?
Hindsight is a fine thing…In this sort of situation it really is worth taking a good bearing on the animal before you shoot. Whether it is a landmark, or with a compass, mobile phone, or do modern electronics optics have bearing indicators. And leave a stick or marker at the shooting position.
If you have two sticks, walk forward a distance on the bearing and plant the second stick. Keeping the two in line keeps you in a straight line to where you think the animal is.
Also on open ground it is very easy to get your distances wrong.
But first rule is keep your eye on the animal and don’t take it off till you have found it.