That’s prob about what I’m getting.You must have very slow deer3-4 seconds full tilt for some of the fallow I have shot is closer to 50-60
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I spent so long shooting foxes before I got into shooting deer that I am so used to seeing things drop on the spot so when they dont the first though is "was that a bad shot" ..and often that isnt true with deer. Most Roe I have shot either drop on the spot or run 5-10m. I have shot fallow who have managed 50m with a bust front shoulder and an exploded heart...staggering how tough they can be. Since I have moved to copper I am trying to pin them through the front shoulders but sometimes, if I dont "think" I go behind the shoulder...but again this has resulted in bang flops as well as 20m runners.That’s prob about what I’m getting.
If they come up against a fence, they generally fall over it and can’t get up.
When they get to the woods (I suspect) they stumble over the fence or in the bramble and fall over fairly quickly.
I guess I also draw no pleasure from shooting one, to see it run (for what feels like an age) and wonder if I should have left it alone![]()
Mainly 100-200yrds as the meadows aren’t massive.You haven't said what distance your shooting the fallow at?
It's probably more where you're putting the bullet that counts.
No harm in having more than 1 rifle in the cabinet.
My experience in Scotland with the .300 WM is exactly as you describe. If I do my bit properly of course.A bigger calibre is likely to help reduce runners in my experience. If you increase frontal area and velocity you will get more deer folding and dropping on the spot, particularly if you choose your bullet carefully and bring your point of aim to the top of the heart region as per the photo below. Starting with a .308 is a good start, .30-06 is better and the .300 Magnums almost eliminate runners with decent shot placement. Obviously meat damage can increase accordingly but can be mitigated by bullet selection. It all depends on your tolerance to runners and meat damage.
Yep, nothing gets around crap shot placement…. Gut shot beasts will run for sure but if anyone wants a tool to minimize the run distance then a .300 Magnum does that very well.My experience in Scotland with the .300 WM is exactly as you describe. If I do my bit properly of course.
Had a roe doe run 50 yards or more after being hit with well north of 3000 ft-lb impact energy from my 300 PRC. No heart, lung hanging out of the exit, piled up on the boundary.Mainly 100-200yrds as the meadows aren’t massive.
It sounds like a slight adjustment of bullet strike is the way forward.
I’m sure to increase the strike energy and size of wound channel will give a greater margin for error with this too?
Clearly bullet placement is paramount, no question, but stepping up from 6mm 100grn doing 1800ft/lb to a 7mm 140grn with 2700 ft/lb will give more of the shock required to short-circuit the central nervous system??
Looking into the Hilar shot, it seems that it’s not a large target (and they don’t come with bullseyes on their flanks to guide you) so a deviation will strike lungs and other surrounding organs (which means it’s a much safer shot that others) and maybe that’s where a larger caliber will pay dividends?