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I agreei say the number of shots taken before punching the tag, miss on a different animal or not.
really it should almost be a shots per tag ratio to capture what i think the ratio should capture in my mind - which is the ability to hunt effectively, efficiently, carefully, slowly, get close, think before your shots etc. i kind of also think of it as the "ethical ratio"
Can you remember your last 10 critters and the shots they took? I'm looking for the mean and not an outlier.
i say the number of shots taken before punching the tag, miss on a different animal or not.
really it should almost be a shots per tag ratio to capture what i think the ratio should capture in my mind - which is the ability to hunt effectively, efficiently, carefully, slowly, get close, think before your shots etc. i kind of also think of it as the "ethical ratio"
The other situation that isn't really captured in this discussion is the lucky spine shot. Yes one shot one kill... but not where you were aiming.
Agreed, that's what I posted, shooting at 10 elk and missing and then killing the 11th with one shot and saying you're 1 for 1 is pretty disingenuous with regard to this discussion.
The other situation that isn't really captured in this discussion is the lucky spine shot. Yes one shot one kill... but not where you were aiming.
I did this on a bull elk too. I don't like blood trailing.I shoot. If critter is still standing after 3 - 5 seconds, I prepare to shoot again. Took four rounds in a moose and all 4 were lethal but the bull did not understand that.
I've included my misses. Like I said in the first post, I value a clean kill. I believe that is what this is driving at. If you're consistently taking multiple shots then maybe more range time, getting closer or a larger caliber is in order.definitely. i've witnessed this once on a doe antelope on the back half. cratered the poor thing and yeah it died witin probably 30-45 seconds
but still. not a dialed in scope and likely even a pulled shot from what i could tell.
i also think it's really only relevant to big game rifle. it's also hard to take into account that for some things like moose, and even sometimes elk, it might be unethical not to take a second shot, even if the first was a good one
The other situation that isn't really captured in this discussion is the lucky spine shot. Yes one shot one kill... but not where you were aiming.
Don't be to hard on yourself. At 15 feet you had a shot pattern of a muzzle loader with a slug. I usually don't like shots under 15 yardsGiven my propensity at missing turkeys, I'm at around 2:1, literally missed a turkey at 15 feet this year
Thanks for sharing the data.2020: 1 Javelina 3 shots (2 misses) 9.3x62
3 Turkeys 3 shots 12 ga
2019- 4 Deer 4 shots 7x57
1 wild boar 1 shot 9.3x62
1 turkey 1 shot 12 ga
2018- 1 Oryx bull 1 shot 9.3.x62
2017- 3 Pronghorn 3 shots 30-06
2 deer 2 shots 30-06
2016 2 Deer 2 shots 30-06
2015 1 pronghorn 2 shots (1 miss) 30-06
That's as far as I can go back sequentially. Missed very few animals with a rifle, 1st trip for pronghorn in 2012 accounts for approximately 30% of my lifetime total. I am from the school of thought of if an animal able to stand/move, it should be shot again, so I've wasted quite a few bullets on animals that were dead on their feet. But out of 150-200 head of game, I've never lost an animal with a rifle. Muzzleloader and archery hasn't fared as well with 2 lost with each primitive weapon.
Like everything better to be lucky than goodYes, a spine shot is a near miss just as misses are near hits but the inclusion of pepper in the fly shit (*credit JLS) caveats is being that guy.![]()