Pretty horrific leg wound on a deer…

marksman13

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A buddy of mine posted this photo to Facebook of a deer that showed up on his camera. He’s got a history with this buck and knows for a fact it has been shot twice this season. He’s been shot once in the shoulder and was shot in the back leg by a member of a hunting club that neighbors him. I’ve cropped the photo to hide any personal info and the result is a fairly pixelated picture, but look at how nasty that leg wound is. I’m sure he’ll go septic and die of infection soon, but I honestly cannot believe that buck is still walking. Anybody here think there’s any chance the pictured wound is survivable?
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No, not survivable. But nothing goes to waste in the wild, so no worries.

I agree that the deer is going to die. There’s an ongoing debate on his Facebook post about the survivability of that wound. That’s the reason I posed that question at the end of my post.
 
Boy I hate to see that, he’s in for a rough time with that wound.

That said, I have seen a few 3 legged coyotes in my years of predator hunting.

All of them were missing front legs though and they all seemed quite healthy and lived productive lives up to the point they were taken.

That backleg on the above pictured deer is extremely bad and will probably mean his demise.

I shot this hog several years ago and it had a severe wound to its lower jaw.

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It appears that someone tried for a head shot (or had the lead wrong on a running shot) and snapped a round through its lower jaw breaking it, knocking out teeth on both sides of the jaw and severing the tongue.
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When I shot him I was standing on the dam (high side) of a stock tank and he was knee deep in the tank bobbing his head up and down in water trying to drink with that big a$$ed hole in his jaw.

I was about 50 yards away and could see he was skinny and all drawn up but I couldn’t see the wound in his jaw but I knew there was something “wrong” with him.

I eyeballed him for a few minutes through the 2x scope on my rifle and finally decided whatever was wrong with him, he had to go.

I sent a 300 grain .458 diameter JHP right between his eyes and put him out of his misery.

When I walked up on him he stank all to be damned (much worse than your standard wild pig stink) as all that mortified tissue in his face had turned exceptionally bad.

I drug him out of the tank and left him to feed the coyotes and the buzzards as the infection (in my mind) had left what little meat was left on him spoiled.

I fear that deer is in for very hard and miserable time with his leg and that is too bad.
 
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Coyotes may get to him before he dies of infection. I imagine it would be hard to escape coyotes with that kind of a leg wound and his infection would be a dinner bell for coyotes.
 
FWIW, I have seen many deer become victim to the wire fence, many do not survive. No telling how many millions they successfully jump over every hour across the country though.

That would have been a good time to shoot the fellow though.
 
Deer are pretty tough. There was a doe that used to hang out on my property that was missing the lower part of her foreleg. She also had a huge scar on her shoulder and ribs. I saw her for 3 or 4 seasons with a new set of twins each year.
 
This deer needs to be put down. If nobody shoots it again and kills it or if the coyotes don't catch it and kill it.
It will die a slow and miserable death.
In my mind it is the jerks that think they can successfully take running shots at game animals.
Some one on here wrote on another thread that someone they know can constantly take neck shots at running deer and take head shots on running rabbits with a 22.
I call BS on that.
This is what happens with shooting at running game.
I have seen animals shot like this deer and pig. Wounded and having to deal with the pain and infection.
Sometimes healing up other times dieing a slow horrible death.
The same tings happens trying to shoot animals at long distance. Some guys couldn't hit a barn if they were standing inside with the doors closed.

I'd like to see a survey of how many shots people shoot at deer and the actual harvest rate.
And what the actual wounded rate is.
 
Quite a number of quadrupeds can be thought of as 3-legged-with-a-spare, meaning they get along fine missing a leg if they survive the initial shock and infection. Definitely not that uncommon to see dogs and cats missing a limb. It doesn't work out for anything heavy like horses and such, but would not surprise me if deer could live a darned long time on 3 if food is readily available and predator numbers low in the region. That's not excusing the situation.
 
Quite a number of quadrupeds can be thought of as 3-legged-with-a-spare, meaning they get along fine missing a leg if they survive the initial shock and infection. Definitely not that uncommon to see dogs and cats missing a limb. It doesn't work out for anything heavy like horses and such, but would not surprise me if deer could live a darned long time on 3 if food is readily available and predator numbers low in the region. That's not excusing the situation.
I would agree if it was a clean amputation, but with that much surface area and that much exposed bone, I just don’t see that wound being survivable in the wild.
 
Here are the facts [bordering on detail] as put forward in the OP:
[Known] history with this buck and knows for a fact it has been shot twice
this season
. He’s been shot once in the shoulder and was shot in the back
leg by a member of a hunting club that neighbors him.
Things kind of speak for themselves at that point.

I'll offer that while "Judge not, that ye be not judged..." is my usual mantra,
. . . sometimes I make an exception.

.
 
Boy thats a sad sight. I agree that deer is in for a rough time. I have seen severely injured animals like this linger on for months of agony before disappearing, fate presumed.

While I was driving a mail route there was one deer similar that I saw almost every day until I didn't. She had been hit by a car and had a severely broken rear leg that would flop around every which way every time she tried to put weight on it. I watched that poor deer get thinner and thinner, lose more and more hair, and get more and more swayback from compensating for the injury. It was truly a sad thing but because it was a "town deer" it lingered on much longer than it would have in the wild.

Its terrible seeing the toll prolonged agony takes on an animal.
 
I was headed home one evening just after dark when I came upon a police car with lights on stopped in the road, an officer running around in the road and then noticed another feller also running down the road with the cop. Of course I hit the brakes on the Jeep and came to a skidding stop, snapped my big lamps on and there running down the road ahead of the cop and the other feller was a deer with three legs, missing a hind leg. On the road was a leg and the front of the truck was smashed. The deer vaulted a fence and was gone into the darkness.
 
This deer needs to be put down. If nobody shoots it again and kills it or if the coyotes don't catch it and kill it.
It will die a slow and miserable death.
In my mind it is the jerks that think they can successfully take running shots at game animals.
Some one on here wrote on another thread that someone they know can constantly take neck shots at running deer and take head shots on running rabbits with a 22.
I call BS on that.
This is what happens with shooting at running game.
I have seen animals shot like this deer and pig. Wounded and having to deal with the pain and infection.
Sometimes healing up other times dieing a slow horrible death.
The same tings happens trying to shoot animals at long distance. Some guys couldn't hit a barn if they were standing inside with the doors closed.

I'd like to see a survey of how many shots people shoot at deer and the actual harvest rate.
And what the actual wounded rate is.

More likely it was property ownership patterns that prevented the shooter from following an animal that wasn't DRT. Doubt SOP of a "hunt club" (hard for me to comprehend such a thing) includes "dynamic" hunting methods, so it seems more likely to me that it was a static shot.

We do shoot running deer...regularly. We drive and track, along with more sedentary styles. In fact, I don't know a soul that would even claim not to shoot running deer. And we've chased wounded deer for miles and days, and have never had one wounded that badly that got away. It's the responsibility we take. Don't you find it odd that shooting a sitting grouse, duck, rabbit is unsporting, but shooting a running deer is unethical? Bring that attitude to the north woods of New England and you'll find yourself hungry. Gotta shoot 'em where and when you see 'em...or get none at all.
 
More likely it was property ownership patterns that prevented the shooter from following an animal that wasn't DRT. Doubt SOP of a "hunt club" (hard for me to comprehend such a thing) includes "dynamic" hunting methods, so it seems more likely to me that it was a static shot.

We do shoot running deer...regularly. We drive and track, along with more sedentary styles. In fact, I don't know a soul that would even claim not to shoot running deer. And we've chased wounded deer for miles and days, and have never had one wounded that badly that got away. It's the responsibility we take. Don't you find it odd that shooting a sitting grouse, duck, rabbit is unsporting, but shooting a running deer is unethical? Bring that attitude to the north woods of New England and you'll find yourself hungry. Gotta shoot 'em where and when you see 'em...or get none at all.
We shoot rabbits, waterfowl and game birds with shotguns which increases the likelihood of a hit. Those smaller animals also require a lot less killing than a large game animal. I’m not going to shoot a running deer, but I know plenty of dog hunting clubs around here which shoot at running deer all the time. Their hit ratio is much lower than the hit ratio of still hunters and stand hunters. A deer standing still shot from a solid rest is a much better target than a deer hauling tail in front of a pack of hounds. I’ve got no problem with deer drives or using dogs to hunt deer if that’s how one chooses to hunt, but I’m not shooting at a running deer.
 
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We hunt with hounds and shotguns in a lot of counties in Virginia . Rifles are unlawful in many counties in the state . Probably half of the deer that I have killed have been running , with the hounds chasing and a shotgun . The only running deer that I didn’t find , was a buck that I hesitated on shooting and then decided I wanted some more tenderloin and it got too close . I think my pattern was too tight .
 
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