stevenf
Platinum Member
HappyCPE, Absolutely the idea in every hunter thats worth his salt is to put the animal down as quickly and painlessly as possible and in a perfect world that is the case but in hunting especially with a bow its not unusual to have to track a dead deer or almost dead deer for a hundred yards or more. When I say or more it can be a mile or more and still be a dead or dying animal, their will to live is unlike anything human, you shoot a man in the gut with a 3006 and he's going down right now we'll say every time although there are some conditions where he might continue for a bit but odds are down, you shoot a deer in the gut and it can run for miles with its inards dragging behind it and live for hours or days. I realize you'll probably get some archery guy responding that he's never lost a deer and that they always fall within yards of where he's shot them, he's either lying or only shot one deer and got lucky. I'm not saying I wouldn't be comfortable with a bow on 13+ acres but I am saying sooner or later the deer will leave your property and die you'll want to be prepared for that and I'd also say 99% of the hunters I've ever hunted with or had hunt on our property if they have a good visual of the shot placement and a blood trail they will follow it until they find their game regardless of fencelines, If you could have an understanding with your neighbors to always call first or something before they cross property lines it would be in your best interest and have it in your contract that they must. If they "can't" cross property lines to retrieve their game you'll want to be prepared for ugliness with the neighbors because most hunters will ignore the can't cross property lines if they have a blood trail or maybe even a visual of the deer laying just on the other side of the fence.
Steve
Steve