Only shoot roe when their head is up?

The reasoning that I was given for this 'rule' is that if you shoot it head down and the deer runs, when the head comes up, the skin (& exit hole) moves and so you then don't get any blood trail.

Edit- and then it might lose blood more slowly and then could run further?
Not just the skin. The muscle groups or layers change alignment, sealing the entrance 'tunnel'.
If you have an exit 'tunnel', (usually much larger) then this isn't a problem, however, if you have a round which doesn't 'exit', you will have a tracking problem on a 'runner'.
This isn't speculation, muscle layers can be lined up with sufficient accuracy to determine (in a court of law) whether someone was shot whilst holding his hands up.
 
The reasoning that I was given for this 'rule' is that if you shoot it head down and the deer runs, when the head comes up, the skin (& exit hole) moves and so you then don't get any blood trail.

Edit- and then it might lose blood more slowly and then could run further?
I don't buy any of that.
1- even if the exit hole is covered, a good lung shot deer is still bleeding, lots, it just might still be contained in the body, and
2- with a proper expanding bullet with sufficient energy to exit, there will be a blood trail regardless

If people are shooting bullets with poor expansion ability, or at the low end of the energy requirement, or small bullets, I can see where this might be a problem.

Use good bullets, lots energy, good shot placement. (double lung is preferred) head up/down won't be an issue
 
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