No blood trail!

DevonRifle

Well-Known Member
I had a very unusual experience a short while ago on one of my favourite permissions. I took a friend’s son with me who hadn’t experienced stalking before. He is nineteen and very keen to find out more about it. We arrived mid afternoon, a good hour and forty five minutes before sunset. We set off from the barns where I park and approached the first field, looking through the hedge from the the path I commented quietly that I never see deer in this field and as I finished my sentence I exclaimed “Oh a doe!”. It was dropped with a neck shot and with it gralloched and left cooling the lad asked if we were going after another as it was early, to which I replied “definitely!” He was quite pleased that he hadn’t been at all squeamish and I think it helped that it was completely clean and blood free due to the clean neck shot.

We entered the next field and as we crossed it three deer ran across the adjacent field and out of site. There’s a little valley between the two fields and I suggested that we stand still and wait a few minutes to let them stop and we could try and find them in the farther field. Whilst we waited one of them, a doe, reappeared back through the hedge half way up the rise looking at us. It was about 165 yards and I had a clear side on shot. I adjusted for the drop and took the shot off my quad sticks aiming for the heart. The animal bolted back across the field in the reverse direction from where we had first seen three run, followed by another slightly smaller doe. They disappeared from sight on the right side of the field but the smaller on reappeared and kept looking back. I could see it wasn’t the one I had shot at so I left it even though I had a couple of clear shots. I was focussed on the deer I had shot and don’t like to shoot another until I recover the first.

After about ten minutes I was quite confident that the second deer had been waiting for a fallen relation and that I would find it upon entering the field. We didn’t see it and the lad was convinced it had left the field to the right and I let him go that way whilst I went to the point of impact. I found two large tufts of hair but no blood. I kept looking around but no blood trail. It was still early and there was plenty of light but nothing. I was sure that the smaller deer MUST have been looking back for the other so I kept looking and eventually found it in a dip in the field dead but still no blood trail.

We gralloched the deer which was a very different experience for the lad as this one was full of blood. The bullet had pierced the lungs and severed the whole heart at one of the main arteries. No blood seemed to have left the carcass but then the heart could not have pumped it out.

I’ve never had this before, has anybody else tracked a deer with no blood trail?
 
Had it with a munty buck a few weeks ago, deer dropped and flopping around like a fish, then stopped. I looked down to pick up the brass, looked up to see the munty disappear around the corner into some thick cover. Not any blood at the shot site at all. Released the dog who crashed into the cover , next all I could hear was a lot of splashing around , dog and deer swimming up a flooded ditch, deer breaks out of ditch running across some cover crop, with the dog gaining ground, as they disappeared back into cover, they break cover , over a gravel road into more cover. By the sound off it the dog caught the munty in this cover , also sounded like the munty gave the dog a good clout too- the rest I had to watch on the garmin gps- heard them crossing another water filled ditch and the dog was showing going flat out across the next field towards the boundary fence- probably 900 yds away. Managed to call the dog off with the bleeps on the collar and lots of calling. Unfortunately never found the munty, dogs was a bit lame for an hour but walked it off and was completely fine the next day.
 
I had a very unusual experience a short while ago on one of my favourite permissions. I took a friend’s son with me who hadn’t experienced stalking before. He is nineteen and very keen to find out more about it. We arrived mid afternoon, a good hour and forty five minutes before sunset. We set off from the barns where I park and approached the first field, looking through the hedge from the the path I commented quietly that I never see deer in this field and as I finished my sentence I exclaimed “Oh a doe!”. It was dropped with a neck shot and with it gralloched and left cooling the lad asked if we were going after another as it was early, to which I replied “definitely!” He was quite pleased that he hadn’t been at all squeamish and I think it helped that it was completely clean and blood free due to the clean neck shot.

We entered the next field and as we crossed it three deer ran across the adjacent field and out of site. There’s a little valley between the two fields and I suggested that we stand still and wait a few minutes to let them stop and we could try and find them in the farther field. Whilst we waited one of them, a doe, reappeared back through the hedge half way up the rise looking at us. It was about 165 yards and I had a clear side on shot. I adjusted for the drop and took the shot off my quad sticks aiming for the heart. The animal bolted back across the field in the reverse direction from where we had first seen three run, followed by another slightly smaller doe. They disappeared from sight on the right side of the field but the smaller on reappeared and kept looking back. I could see it wasn’t the one I had shot at so I left it even though I had a couple of clear shots. I was focussed on the deer I had shot and don’t like to shoot another until I recover the first.

After about ten minutes I was quite confident that the second deer had been waiting for a fallen relation and that I would find it upon entering the field. We didn’t see it and the lad was convinced it had left the field to the right and I let him go that way whilst I went to the point of impact. I found two large tufts of hair but no blood. I kept looking around but no blood trail. It was still early and there was plenty of light but nothing. I was sure that the smaller deer MUST have been looking back for the other so I kept looking and eventually found it in a dip in the field dead but still no blood trail.

We gralloched the deer which was a very different experience for the lad as this one was full of blood. The bullet had pierced the lungs and severed the whole heart at one of the main arteries. No blood seemed to have left the carcass but then the heart could not have pumped it out.

I’ve never had this before, has anybody else tracked a deer with no blood trail?
Yes
 
I had a very unusual experience a short while ago on one of my favourite permissions. I took a friend’s son with me who hadn’t experienced stalking before. He is nineteen and very keen to find out more about it. We arrived mid afternoon, a good hour and forty five minutes before sunset. We set off from the barns where I park and approached the first field, looking through the hedge from the the path I commented quietly that I never see deer in this field and as I finished my sentence I exclaimed “Oh a doe!”. It was dropped with a neck shot and with it gralloched and left cooling the lad asked if we were going after another as it was early, to which I replied “definitely!” He was quite pleased that he hadn’t been at all squeamish and I think it helped that it was completely clean and blood free due to the clean neck shot.

We entered the next field and as we crossed it three deer ran across the adjacent field and out of site. There’s a little valley between the two fields and I suggested that we stand still and wait a few minutes to let them stop and we could try and find them in the farther field. Whilst we waited one of them, a doe, reappeared back through the hedge half way up the rise looking at us. It was about 165 yards and I had a clear side on shot. I adjusted for the drop and took the shot off my quad sticks aiming for the heart. The animal bolted back across the field in the reverse direction from where we had first seen three run, followed by another slightly smaller doe. They disappeared from sight on the right side of the field but the smaller on reappeared and kept looking back. I could see it wasn’t the one I had shot at so I left it even though I had a couple of clear shots. I was focussed on the deer I had shot and don’t like to shoot another until I recover the first.

After about ten minutes I was quite confident that the second deer had been waiting for a fallen relation and that I would find it upon entering the field. We didn’t see it and the lad was convinced it had left the field to the right and I let him go that way whilst I went to the point of impact. I found two large tufts of hair but no blood. I kept looking around but no blood trail. It was still early and there was plenty of light but nothing. I was sure that the smaller deer MUST have been looking back for the other so I kept looking and eventually found it in a dip in the field dead but still no blood trail.

We gralloched the deer which was a very different experience for the lad as this one was full of blood. The bullet had pierced the lungs and severed the whole heart at one of the main arteries. No blood seemed to have left the carcass but then the heart could not have pumped it out.

I’ve never had this before, has anybody else tracked a deer with no blood trail?
Often.
 
This happens regularly. A lot of my ground is replanted clearfell so they only have to run a few yards and they are very hard to find. That's why I stalk with a good dog.
 
Yes with a Roe doe. A lot of grey pins but not a speck of blood anywhere. It was in deep snow so it was easy to follow the slots. No blood along the trail either, then after about 35 yards I found her in a clump of bramble. As said above I found it more common with Sika.
 
You can get the opposite too, masses of blood, trail like its been poured by a bucket but dries up. I track occasionally for a driven boar shoot, we had one a couple of weeks ago, last day of season - tracked it 3 miles with my teckel Ruben, still can't believe we lost it in the end....
 
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I had a very unusual experience a short while ago on one of my favourite permissions. I took a friend’s son with me who hadn’t experienced stalking before. He is nineteen and very keen to find out more about it. We arrived mid afternoon, a good hour and forty five minutes before sunset. We set off from the barns where I park and approached the first field, looking through the hedge from the the path I commented quietly that I never see deer in this field and as I finished my sentence I exclaimed “Oh a doe!”. It was dropped with a neck shot and with it gralloched and left cooling the lad asked if we were going after another as it was early, to which I replied “definitely!” He was quite pleased that he hadn’t been at all squeamish and I think it helped that it was completely clean and blood free due to the clean neck shot.

We entered the next field and as we crossed it three deer ran across the adjacent field and out of site. There’s a little valley between the two fields and I suggested that we stand still and wait a few minutes to let them stop and we could try and find them in the farther field. Whilst we waited one of them, a doe, reappeared back through the hedge half way up the rise looking at us. It was about 165 yards and I had a clear side on shot. I adjusted for the drop and took the shot off my quad sticks aiming for the heart. The animal bolted back across the field in the reverse direction from where we had first seen three run, followed by another slightly smaller doe. They disappeared from sight on the right side of the field but the smaller on reappeared and kept looking back. I could see it wasn’t the one I had shot at so I left it even though I had a couple of clear shots. I was focussed on the deer I had shot and don’t like to shoot another until I recover the first.

After about ten minutes I was quite confident that the second deer had been waiting for a fallen relation and that I would find it upon entering the field. We didn’t see it and the lad was convinced it had left the field to the right and I let him go that way whilst I went to the point of impact. I found two large tufts of hair but no blood. I kept looking around but no blood trail. It was still early and there was plenty of light but nothing. I was sure that the smaller deer MUST have been looking back for the other so I kept looking and eventually found it in a dip in the field dead but still no blood trail.

We gralloched the deer which was a very different experience for the lad as this one was full of blood. The bullet had pierced the lungs and severed the whole heart at one of the main arteries. No blood seemed to have left the carcass but then the heart could not have pumped it out.

I’ve never had this before, has anybody else tracked a deer with no blood trail?
It has happened a few times with me. On occasion, lung tissue has been sucked into the exit wound, sealing it up much as a bandage would. You occasionally see the odd spot of blood (presumably from the entrance wound) but no splashes from the much larger exit wound. I assume the shock wave of the bullet passing through the lung tissue can occasionally suck said tissue into the exit wound.
 
If you have a small entrance and exit wound it is not uncommon. I see it more with the smaller calibres like 6.5mm compared to the 30 calibres and with bullets that tend to lose petals where the base of the bullet exits intact.
 
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