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<blockquote data-quote="orangeRcode" data-source="post: 1927644" data-attributes="member: 2742"><p>Good advice about waiting. I always sit once I've shot one. No reason to push them. If you've hit them well enough, they will lay down and bleed out. Generally 20 minutes or so is adequate. It's important to make note of where you last saw them and direction they were moving. I took a doe the last evening of gun season last year right about dusk. I waited about 15 minutes before getting out of my stand. I found her about 40 yards from where I had shot her but she had gone down a ravine and crawled under a big cedar tree. If I hadn't had a good idea where she went in and saw the white of her tail I'm not sure I would have found her.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="orangeRcode, post: 1927644, member: 2742"] Good advice about waiting. I always sit once I've shot one. No reason to push them. If you've hit them well enough, they will lay down and bleed out. Generally 20 minutes or so is adequate. It's important to make note of where you last saw them and direction they were moving. I took a doe the last evening of gun season last year right about dusk. I waited about 15 minutes before getting out of my stand. I found her about 40 yards from where I had shot her but she had gone down a ravine and crawled under a big cedar tree. If I hadn't had a good idea where she went in and saw the white of her tail I'm not sure I would have found her. [/QUOTE]
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