If you shoot enough deer……. this happens. I usually do similar to others here and mark the shot sight with tape, range the animal and check the bearing. Yesterday, under pressure to complete the doe cull I was in a hurry. I dropped 2 kids on a gently upwards sloping piece of featureless scrub off to the right of an ill-defined track. First dropped on the spot, the other ran about 30m then dropped. I then turned my attention to the third in the group which ran approx 50m to a clump of gorse off to the left of the track, stalking slowly in to close the distance. On the open ground it was a risk but not unsurprisingly, it lifted and ran. I returned to the quad and set off to collect to 2 on the ground in front of me. Could I locate them - hell no. Using the visual clues I had, I did find the first after what seemed an eternity but in reality was I suggest only 5. The second was a challenge. Repeated circling, use of thermal - all revealed nothing but I knew it was dead on that open ground. Back to the shot site, re-range and another go at looking for it - straight to it
It had dropped behind an innocuous tussock, virtually hidden from view.
On the way off the ground I spotted another lone roe - same happened again but this time it was with clumps of gorse. Up close, they all look the same
After circling what I thought was “the” clump I dismounted and set the Teckel off. Off he went like an express train to the right clump 20m distant. Light was fading fast, I was in a hurry to get off the ground and the basics were bypassed for the sake of expediency. There is a morale…..
On the way off the ground I spotted another lone roe - same happened again but this time it was with clumps of gorse. Up close, they all look the same