JimR
Elite Member
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( When I hauled the carcass up to where I could get the head, I found about 3" of broken-off arrow in his flank. Pretty obvious to me that he had lost the hunter and then rubbed the arrow up against a tree to try and dislodge it, breaking it off--and while there are two sides to the story, my assumption is that the hunter didn't care enough to finish what he started.
)</font>
Good point about not following up on a deer hit by an arrow. But I can tell you from a personal experience that once the deer breaks off the arrow, the blood stops flowing and the trail dissappears. The skin closes up where the arrow went in and stops the flow. I looked for a chest shot deer one year for 3 days. I even used a dog and we could not find him. On another note. A friend of mine just bagged a 220 pound 8 pointer in behind my house last weekend with a shot to the lungs with his bow.
)</font>
Good point about not following up on a deer hit by an arrow. But I can tell you from a personal experience that once the deer breaks off the arrow, the blood stops flowing and the trail dissappears. The skin closes up where the arrow went in and stops the flow. I looked for a chest shot deer one year for 3 days. I even used a dog and we could not find him. On another note. A friend of mine just bagged a 220 pound 8 pointer in behind my house last weekend with a shot to the lungs with his bow.