Free: Contests & Raffles.
I know this topic had me looking for an injured animal today.Found some blood,while taking my wife hunting.Couldn't figure it out , anybody ever find blood from a doe in heat.It was strange, hopefully not the buck my wife has been looking for.So I'm saying this topic sucks.,sure hope I'm not finding one .
Quote from: OutHouse on November 11, 2025, 11:14:02 AMThis is a really interesting and thought provoking thread!It really is, good learning opportunity. I learned a lot from another recent thread that discussed having a loaded magazine in a vehicle (but not inserted into the rifle) and whether that was a violation. A few weeks later that came up as a buddy and I were driving up to where we hunt elk.
This is a really interesting and thought provoking thread!
Quote from: hunter399 on November 11, 2025, 09:07:24 PMI know this topic had me looking for an injured animal today.Found some blood,while taking my wife hunting.Couldn't figure it out , anybody ever find blood from a doe in heat.It was strange, hopefully not the buck my wife has been looking for.So I'm saying this topic sucks.,sure hope I'm not finding one .I killed a buck by following a blood trail I found in the snow. Blood was from a fresh muzzle-loader ball in the hindquarter. No other hunters in the area.Can't imagine a doe in heat leaving a trail.
Short seasons and over crowded public lands.Injured deer is pretty common.
If you don’t kill or incapacitate an animal it ain’t yours. If I made a sloppy first shot a blew a deers knee off shame on me. I realize it happens but really it shouldn’t. It ultimately means I wasn’t in control of the shot. You don’t get to call dibs on an animal by tagging it with a sloppy shot.
Just for consideration, some Alaska rules require you to fill out (void) your tag if you wound a big game animal and don't recover it.