Thanks Rem270 for the how to:
The view from my stand after second shot as he was laying "DEAD?".
Here is the wound from first shot:
Noteworthy here is that the angle of the arrow is a bit deceptive. The buck actually turned into the shot as he pivoted and caused the arrow to hit forward on entrance and angle slightly back on exit. Both scapulas were sliced with the offside scapula sustaining the most damage. There was major muscle damage to both muscle shoulder groups.
The blood under the skin was heavily oxygenated as removing the skin around the wound would reveal.
So the top of the spine where it joins the shoulder girdle was seriously damage. The Broadhead actually severed at least two of the bony appendages (spinal process) in the cervical lower.
Both shoulders exhibited extreme blood loss between the scapulas and thoracic cavity.
(there was lots of congealed frothy blood)
(THERE WAS DRAMATIC AND CONCLUSIVE DISTINCTION BETWEEN WOUND DAMAGE RESULTING FROM THIRD AND FINAL CHEST CAVITY SHOT AND FIRST TWO BODY SHOTS)
The rear shot:
So this arrow entered here and angled forward severing a couple tops off the spinal process.
Bleeding around the wound site was moderate to severe and the arrow had to be forcibly removed after recovery.
The Broadhead was DEAD CENTER of the spine! But somehow did not sever the spinal cord.
He was 3.5 years old minimum.
The view from my stand after second shot as he was laying "DEAD?".
Here is the wound from first shot:
Noteworthy here is that the angle of the arrow is a bit deceptive. The buck actually turned into the shot as he pivoted and caused the arrow to hit forward on entrance and angle slightly back on exit. Both scapulas were sliced with the offside scapula sustaining the most damage. There was major muscle damage to both muscle shoulder groups.
The blood under the skin was heavily oxygenated as removing the skin around the wound would reveal.
So the top of the spine where it joins the shoulder girdle was seriously damage. The Broadhead actually severed at least two of the bony appendages (spinal process) in the cervical lower.
Both shoulders exhibited extreme blood loss between the scapulas and thoracic cavity.
(there was lots of congealed frothy blood)
(THERE WAS DRAMATIC AND CONCLUSIVE DISTINCTION BETWEEN WOUND DAMAGE RESULTING FROM THIRD AND FINAL CHEST CAVITY SHOT AND FIRST TWO BODY SHOTS)
The rear shot:
So this arrow entered here and angled forward severing a couple tops off the spinal process.
Bleeding around the wound site was moderate to severe and the arrow had to be forcibly removed after recovery.
The Broadhead was DEAD CENTER of the spine! But somehow did not sever the spinal cord.
He was 3.5 years old minimum.