Evil Chris: Bambi did not exactly escape from everyone. My bro got it.
Quote:
Originally posted by XXXPhoto
Feynman,
Where'd you hunt? Black powder, rifle or bow?
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I hunt around N46deg 30' and W76deg 00'. That's in Canada, near Maniwaki, QC.
I hunt with an Excalibur Exocet crossbow, 175lbs, 310 fps, and very precise.
http://www.excaliburcrossbow.com/exocet.html
I reliably group in the 2" target dot without any problems at 40yds.
I use an excalibur drop-zone (tm) 2.5 x 32mm scope for two reasons:
1- it is great for estimating the drop vs distance and thus minimizes the chances of wounding-without-killing the animal
2- it gives superior aiming in low light (dusk and dawn), which is precisely when you sight most deers. Again, this is for increasing precision and safety.
In Quebec, by default, with firearms and crossbows, we can shoot only males. There is a draw for distributing female and no-antlers deers permits. This year, they distributed a huge amount. The number of hunters is declining, thanks to all the hoops we have to jump through to possess firearms.
Simple possession of a firearm is a crime in Canada, unless you have a conditional waiver of prosecution, also know as a "permit". Note that formally, having a permit does not make you a non-criminal, it simply ensure that you won't get prosecuted for having commited that specific crime...
Since I am a law abiding citizen, I choose to not request a conditional waiver of prosecution and now hunt with a crossbow.
I found the use of the crossbow very enjoyable. I even consider start practicing for passing my bow proficiency certificate to be able to enjoy the early (and extended) bow deer season.
There is a special 3 days pre-season for black powder and crossbow only but I never took advantage of it because it would cost me another 5 days of absence from work. Maybe next year.
This year, they issued a very large number of female permits because the herd is growing too much, and there is an increased number of dammages to crops, private property and life-threatening road accidents. Just the number of road accidents increase probably offsets any benefit from an alledged reduction in crime commited with firearms in Canada due to the new firearms law.
Hitting a 150 lbs deer at 60 mph is extremely dangerous (compare that with the destructive potential of a baseball weighing a few ounces and thrown at the same speed...). So, short of being able to attract more hunters, they allocate more female permits.
My bro won a female permit this year and shot a small female calf. That is all that we saw. We saw plenty of large tracks but the wind played tricks on us for the whole week and kept the deers away from our posting spots. We dumped 50 lbs of carrots and 50 lbs of apples the first day we got there and they ate all the apples but about 15 of them during the first night. Then, they got unto the carrots. Yet, we failed to attract any older, wiser ones during the time we were posted.
Many people thinks that guns and technology makes it easier for us to kill deer than for deer to stay alive. They have no idea how sophisticated a surviving machine a deer is...
This year, at the registration station, I saw a ratio of 2:1 in female to males, and BIG mothers, 150+ lbs were very common. This means that they are old, that the herd is under-exploited and growing.
Overpopulation also increases the risks of pandemics that would lead to the death a huge percentage of the population, requiring years to recover.
The lady with me is my mom, who is not too keen on having her pic on adult webmaster boards... :-) This pic (of me) was taken tuesday, just before we prepared it for the freezer. The bullet hole you see is not the entry point but the bullet exit point. We are not stupid enough to waste shoulder meat on purpose... It was shot with a hand-reloaded 150g Nosler Ballistic Tip Boat Tail Spire Point .308" bullet in a medium-power bolt-action rifle.