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I use a "String Tracker" when I hunt Turkeys, but when I hit a deer, or Elk, I follow a blood trail.Works real good for me.
Patton, Maybe he is saying rifle/muzzleloader guys lose animals too. That's what I was implying in my post.
What is the rule on this.....barbed or barbless arrowheads??
Quote from: Mr T on October 29, 2011, 09:54:50 AMWhat is the rule on this.....barbed or barbless arrowheads??barbless and you can only keep hatchery animals.............
i go "Dukes of Hazard" style and just put a half stick of TNT on my arrow. no need for a pass through, instead of dropping in its tracks it just bones most of it out for you!
Back in the 80's there was a thing called a Spider Tracker (one of the tracking type things at the time). It was a spool of very very very fine thread (about 600 yards I think) that actually fit inside the aluminum arrow right behind the broadhead insert. The string then traveled up the shaft and exited a tiny drilled hole and attached to a piece of velcro. Upon shooting, the velcro flap hooked onto another piece of velcro attached to the bow.My first deer that I actually hit was recovered with the help of this. The arrow stuck in the deer as it ran off. The tracking line did break several times but it caught again on brush and left more each time. There was no blood from my high lung hit and the string gave me a direction to go while looking for her. I really didn't need it on this one as she ran out a finger of trees that stuck out into a huge alfalfa field. Even shooting my slow bow way back then, it did not seem to effect arrow flight out to 25 yards, my max range then. They also helped me find a few arrows in the woods....