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Hunting & Fishing
A tale of unfortunate events
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<blockquote data-quote="Hangfire" data-source="post: 3299813" data-attributes="member: 27673"><p>As [USER=24452]@retrieverman[/USER] stated it may just be 'Buck Fever' and if it is you may be pulling the shot at the last instant......you've just got to take a deep breath, focus and work through it.</p><p></p><p>Maybe it's just me but after taking several deer through the years I've always gotten a case of 'buck fever' every time I shoulder my rifle and align the cross hairs on a deer and it makes no difference if it's a buck or doe......I hope I never lose the feeling.</p><p></p><p>Knock on wood I've never lost a deer but I have helped a few people look for them (sometimes successfully and sometimes not) and in each case the shooter felt sincerely bad, not for the meat loss but from knowing that they had wounded a animal that may be suffering a slow painful death.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hangfire, post: 3299813, member: 27673"] As [USER=24452]@retrieverman[/USER] stated it may just be 'Buck Fever' and if it is you may be pulling the shot at the last instant......you've just got to take a deep breath, focus and work through it. Maybe it's just me but after taking several deer through the years I've always gotten a case of 'buck fever' every time I shoulder my rifle and align the cross hairs on a deer and it makes no difference if it's a buck or doe......I hope I never lose the feeling. Knock on wood I've never lost a deer but I have helped a few people look for them (sometimes successfully and sometimes not) and in each case the shooter felt sincerely bad, not for the meat loss but from knowing that they had wounded a animal that may be suffering a slow painful death. [/QUOTE]
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