I shot a buck this past Saturday at 30yds with my new Silvertip, The Rocket. I found the front part of my arrow arrow about 10 yds along the trail, and the back fletching part about 20yds along the trail. No broadhead on the front part. The buck went about 50yds. I thought that maybe the Cutthroat was inside the buck. Then thought that was impossible as the exit slice was apparent and the arrow made its way through.
I looked for the broadhead with my metal detector along the bloodtrail with no luck. I was thinking about this some more wondering where it ended up. I remembered seeing my Nockturnal disappear into his heart/lung area and knowing I shoot 30" D&M Custom ACC Pro Hunters, the broadhead had to have blown thru.
So I went back again with my metal detector and found it stuck in the bottom of an oak buried half way. The buck took off and the Cutthroat stayed in the tree. It was still sharp. Amazing broadhead. I was shooting the 200gr LB with RW feathers. No issues with penetration for sure.
So have any of you guys find your broadheads in weird spot? Mine wasnt weird, just wasnt expected.
I shot a buck last year taht I did not make such a great shot on. The deer went about 300yds. I found the arrow, still whole, at about 275yds. The broadhead had come unscrewed off the arrow. Never did find that one!
I shot a buck this year, and watched him fall over dead at about 50yds. He broke the arrow into 3 pieces. The fletching end was about 10yds from the shot. The middle piece was still inside him when I gutted him. The front 10" and broadhead were nowhere to be found? I looked over and over. I finally found it buried up in a clump of brush about 15yds from where I shot him.
Bisch
Keith,
You really know how to break in a new Rocket. Good on you. Interesting on the broadhead, will have to check out the Cutthroat... I have only had spikes and a small doe in range which I passed on. Congratulations.
On my buck last year, I found the back half of the arrow about 10 yards down the blood trail and thinking the front end was still in the buck, I took my time field dressing..... it was not in him! It was an evening hunt.
The next day, my son and I went to look for it. I climbed up in the tree and had my son walk over to the impact spot and there it was!
No exit wound....broadhead hit off side shoulder.
This still has me scratching my head.....
God bless,
Rodd
Bisch, was it along the trail? Or 15yds off the trail?
One time I shot a small buck and made a perfect lung hit, when he turned to leave I heard a metallic clank( I was shooting aluminum ) and he only made it 60 yards in the open hardwoods. I knew the arrow went right through but, I couldn't find it anywhere along the trail I went back and forth several times. Finally I found it about 5-7 yards off the blood trail , and only then did I realize that he had kicked the arrow in the air with his hind leg ( thus the clanging sound) and it made it that far.
All of my BH's I found in trees had definitely NOT passed through a deer. I have never killed many deer with the bow, but all the heads were easily found still attached to the arrow.
If you had had the bevel and feathers matched up, you would probably had cut down the tree and the arrow would of had a complete pass through! Then you wouldn't be short an arrow now! Congrats!
QuoteOriginally posted by Keith Zimmerman:
Bisch, was it along the trail? Or 15yds off the trail?
Probably 10 feet off the trail, but 15yds from the shot.
I wish I had the video of an impala I shot this summer in S Africa. I shot the impala at about 18yds, and the hit was perfect. Complete passthru, and the arrow landed about 7-9yds closer to us than where he was shot. You could not see it with the naked eye, and we were very surprised to find the arrow where we did. The slomo video shows him spinning hard as the arrow hit him, and by the time the arrow exited, that side was facing us instead of being away from us. it was incredible.
Bisch
Great thread Keith. Certainly my least favourite place to find one of my broadheads was in our neighbors huge 8 pt opening week of gun season.
It was years ago but it still makes me feel weird! :bigsmyl:
Bisch, sounds like Science Fiction. U almost shot yourself:^)
Back in my compound days I shot a doe and didn't get a pass through - which never happened on a vitals shot. So i was confused but saw her fall so went right to work. My arrow had the insert in it, and the ferule of the broadhead had broke flush with the insert.
I hit a tree that she was standing basically against. I went back to the shot and there was blood spatter all over the tree and a Thunderhead 100 buried in it! I took a pic as it's really cool, but won't post here since it was a compound kill.
That's a farm we still hunt today and every year I check it and it just becomes a little more "part of the tree" each year.
Maybe someone will find it or notice it many years from now and ponder how.
I found, or should say my butcher found my broadhead lodged along the off-side leg of the doe I shot in early season. Thought it had to be in the offal somewhere. Even used my metal detector. Knew it had to be in the animal somewhere as there was no exit hole and she broke off three quarters of the arrow when she took off and brushed against a tree.
Keith, great thread. I've used the metal detector twice successfully to find my arrows or broadheads. First time was a big buck where the hit was quartering away. Perfect shot angling forward & exited the lower scapula next to the ridge bone, deer made it 50 yards. We found the back half about 10 yards down the trail. The front 12-15 inches was harder to find... Used the metal detector and it was within 10-15 ft of impact. The buck broke it with its front exit leg as it took off. Second time was a Doe in Late Season snow/ice/Marsh grass. My arrow zipped through and buried under the snow/ice/grass. I couldn't find it til spring when the snow melted... But the detector did its job. Fast forward to this year. I harvested a buck, passed through the deer but could not tell if it was complete or where the arrow went. I've searched and searched along the trail with metal detector and no luck yet. I WANT MY ARROW BACK... That arrow alone had been through 1 turkey & 3 deer this year... Beautiful VPA 250/Grain Terminator 3-Blade 1-1/4" cut broadheads on the front. I'm tearing up as I type this.....
I found one under a stone wall with the aid of my sons metal detector in the spring following my first of two misses at the same buck. The doug fir shaft bounced out of the area I found it in but I could not immediately find it.
It was a big old sasquatch and I made up for the two misses when I killed the next buck that came downtime trail 10 minutes later. That happened on 11/11/11 and was a very memorable hunt.
I shot a buck in Texas from a tree stand that was standing over a flat rock the buck did the duck and roll and a friend found the front end of the arrow and broadhead two days later between the rock and the tree is was in
I shot a boar in about 2005 with a Woodsman tipped 2018. It took off with about 10 inches of arrow sticking out either side. It was a great shot and he only made it about 60 yards. When I found him no hint of arrow anywhere. I spent about 3 hours looking for it that evening and the next day and never found any of it.
The blood trail was good so tracing the route was easy but it just vanished. I still don't understand it. :confused:
I shot a buck still hunting. The Hill tipped arrow seemed to fly perfect, but I got a glimpse of my feathers going sideways beyond the deer. My arrow apparently snapped in half on a sappling. I found the broad head with about 14" of shaft sticking up in the weeds, I do not know where the fletched end went.
I have killed a buck and doe this year with both complete pass through , wood arrow and have not found either arrow. I have looked all along the blood trail, and the area I shot them making wide sweeps, knowing they will sometimes kick the arrow a long ways but nothing. Go figure!
All mine have been easy to find
(http://i1135.photobucket.com/albums/m637/cjohntalk/1369484643.jpg) (http://s1135.photobucket.com/user/cjohntalk/media/1369484643.jpg.html)
:knothead:
(http://i1135.photobucket.com/albums/m637/cjohntalk/Kenny%20M%20Lease%20Hunt/1383610366.jpg) (http://s1135.photobucket.com/user/cjohntalk/media/Kenny%20M%20Lease%20Hunt/1383610366.jpg.html)
Funny experience with a broadhead. I shot a big doe in the neck with a snuffer and it didn't penetrate but a couple of inches. It put the deer down instantly, I unscrewed the arrow and could still see the threads on the adapter. My mother always wanted the neck that she would cook as a roast. I asked her to save my broadhead as it was buried in the neck bone. A few weeks later I was visiting and she said I saved your arrow head but I don't know why you wanted it because it is all bent up and broke. Your dad had to use a hammer and chisel to get it out of that bone.
QuoteOriginally posted by Bisch:
I shot a buck last year taht I did not make such a great shot on. The deer went about 300yds. I found the arrow, still whole, at about 275yds. The broadhead had come unscrewed off the arrow. Never did find that one!
I shot a buck this year, and watched him fall over dead at about 50yds. He broke the arrow into 3 pieces. The fletching end was about 10yds from the shot. The middle piece was still inside him when I gutted him. The front 10" and broadhead were nowhere to be found? I looked over and over. I finally found it buried up in a clump of brush about 15yds from where I shot him.
Bisch
hey bisch, i still look for that silverflame you shot at that rabbit everytime i pass by that warren.
QuoteOriginally posted by Bisch:
I shot a buck last year taht I did not make such a great shot on. The deer went about 300yds. I found the arrow, still whole, at about 275yds. The broadhead had come unscrewed off the arrow. Never did find that one!
I shot a buck this year, and watched him fall over dead at about 50yds. He broke the arrow into 3 pieces. The fletching end was about 10yds from the shot. The middle piece was still inside him when I gutted him. The front 10" and broadhead were nowhere to be found? I looked over and over. I finally found it buried up in a clump of brush about 15yds from where I shot him.
Bisch
hey bisch, i still look for that silverflame you shot at that rabbit everytime i pass by that warren. it would be cool to send you back your $30 rabbit BH.
I think you need a heavier arrow Charlie. Not much penetration on that sapling. :biglaugh:
A few years ago I shot a large doe from a ground blind and she ran away with the arrow. I found her over 100 yards away but no arrow. I had to find it since it was in my field and I didn't want a bh lying around to get run over with the tractor or a grandkid picking it up. I eventually found it a couple of days later.
On a miss in the dark on a Sika doe I found the arrow buried in a root. I had to unscrew the Wensel Woodsman and leave it.
I once shot a sow. I was in a stand and there were a group of pigs under a water oak feeding. I shot the sow and watched her run and heard my aluminum arrow clanking in trees going the other way. I looked and my arrow passed through the sow and hit another in the neck and he was flopping like a fish. the arrow broke in all the flopping. I was able to drag the pigs to the nearby road. the swamp was flooded and I was hunting up on a hill. In the excitement while skinning my two pigs with one shot I forgot to get the broadhead out of the neck of the pig. It had broken off at the insert of the arrow. Maybe a coyote did`nt cut his lip on the carcass later on.RC
I think Doug Campbell has the best story of all maybe we can get him to post
I shot at a doe and the arrow went over its back and thru the brush. I looked but didn't find it. I went back a few weeks later and found it. It was stuck in the inside of a old tractor tire that some one had dumped years ago.
Good stuff here and yea I had a strange one for sure. Here's the link.
http://tradgang.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=1;t=069482#000000
Back in the 90s Steve Hohensee and I made a trip to POW in AK after black bear. I shot a bear on the last evening which took us on a big circle thru the bush. My arrow broke off just back of the head and we only recovered the shaft. A couple years later Steve and another buddy went back and the buddy shot a bear in the same area. While trailing his bear Steve found my broadhead laying right on the blood trail out in the middle of the brush. I can't imagine the percentages of that happening more than once...
Thats amazing.