doublerack
Active Member
So last night I shot a nice buck. Here's something to think about and I still can't figure out.
I was using a rage and made a perfect shot. Watched him buck really hard and the arrow pass through. He ran about 40 yards before he dissapeared, but I heard him crash and knew where he was down at. When I got down and got my arrow, I started following the path he ran off in. As I was walking I looked very close the entire way, but I didn't see one single drop of blood. When I got to the buck, there was a little blood on the ground around him and some coming out his nose, but even 5yards from where he crashed, there was no blood. When we gutted him, we found that the rage pretty much cut the top of the heart in half. Why wasn't there any blood? Anyone have any ideas?
The fact that you can make an absolute perfect shot, but get no blood out of it. I'm still a little puzzled.
I was using a rage and made a perfect shot. Watched him buck really hard and the arrow pass through. He ran about 40 yards before he dissapeared, but I heard him crash and knew where he was down at. When I got down and got my arrow, I started following the path he ran off in. As I was walking I looked very close the entire way, but I didn't see one single drop of blood. When I got to the buck, there was a little blood on the ground around him and some coming out his nose, but even 5yards from where he crashed, there was no blood. When we gutted him, we found that the rage pretty much cut the top of the heart in half. Why wasn't there any blood? Anyone have any ideas?
The fact that you can make an absolute perfect shot, but get no blood out of it. I'm still a little puzzled.