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Hunting & Fishing
Blood trailing.
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<blockquote data-quote="_CY_" data-source="post: 1344302" data-attributes="member: 7629"><p>lots of good tips already given!!!</p><p></p><p>most important is to wait at least 30 minutes before you think about moving. unless of course deer dropped on the spot and you can plainly see. </p><p></p><p>a deer shot in the heart can still run for 100+ yds... let that deer slowly bleed out. believe me your trail will be MUCH shorter if you have patience and give it a bit before moving. </p><p></p><p>you could end up losing deer completely if it runs to the next county before dying. </p><p></p><p>when tracking always bring along some type of marking material. toilet paper work good. mark you tracks! </p><p></p><p>on particularly difficult searches ... lay the area out in grids. </p><p>normally a deer will run in the easiest to navigate path to a safe looking spot like low depression. but no telling what a deer will do.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="_CY_, post: 1344302, member: 7629"] lots of good tips already given!!! most important is to wait at least 30 minutes before you think about moving. unless of course deer dropped on the spot and you can plainly see. a deer shot in the heart can still run for 100+ yds... let that deer slowly bleed out. believe me your trail will be MUCH shorter if you have patience and give it a bit before moving. you could end up losing deer completely if it runs to the next county before dying. when tracking always bring along some type of marking material. toilet paper work good. mark you tracks! on particularly difficult searches ... lay the area out in grids. normally a deer will run in the easiest to navigate path to a safe looking spot like low depression. but no telling what a deer will do. [/QUOTE]
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