ORIGINAL: Gulfcapt
What Im saying is people will take a shot at 40yrds or greater broadside, not considering what that deer has the capability of doing..(DUCKING IT JUMPING IT)
But won't consider a shot like charlies alittle let say easier because it can't jump/duck it! I don't know what i would of done to be honest with you!
ORIGINAL: JPH
Are we asking if Charlie 01 should have taken the shot, or if we would take it?
From personal experience.
2006, I had a doe walk right under my stand. I shot straight down on her as she was walking straight away. The arrow entered a few inches to the rt. of her spine and exited a few inches to the rt. of her brisket. One lung, top to bottom. I tracked her for 450 yards, over two days, before I lost the trail for good. I'll never make that mistake again.
2010, I had a doe broadside in an open field. I thought she was at 35 yards. It ended up being 43. My arrow went low and clipped her belly, just behind the pint of her sternum. The shot was actually lined up perfectly but my yardage was off and caused a bad hit. Thankfully, the broadhead opened her up so badly that she was unable to travel very far. I recovered her the next morning after coyotes had taken a whole hindquarter. I now have a lazer rangefinder and will never take another archery shot w/o knowing the distance.
Moral? Both were bad shots but the broadside offered a larger margin for error and I got away with it (kind of). In my opinion, the close range, quartering away shot is the most forgiving shot in deer hunting but a broadside is a close second.