I missed

Flbt

AH elite
Joined
Jan 26, 2025
Messages
1,348
Reaction score
1,827
Location
Fl
Media
1
Hunted
Us
I flat out missed a good buck yesterday afternoon.
I waited till today to post because I wanted to check everything.
Deer came out still had good light. Cross hair on the shoulder. Less than 100 yds.
Ran out of the woods stopped in the field.
No blood hair or bone.
Got the dog out he did not find anything they came back this morning nothing.
Check the rifle 2 in high at 100
Shot it at 50 to make double sure.
It might have been a bit higher than 2 in but no more than 1/4 higher.
It’s a new bullet that I am trying a 6mm 100gr hot core
I have used hot core in other cal. Never had a problem.
The way the dog acted I honestly don’t think I touched the deer.
It was as hot enough last night by this afternoon buzzards should have been in the air if it would have died.

I think I just missed and don’t have excuses or explanation.
The reason I am posting this. The youngest nephew was with me looking over the sight while we were hunting.
Uncle I have never seen you miss. Told him it does happen.
He asked would I post my mistake here.
Told him I would. So I did.

I spent my day looking around saw no sign.
Took him this afternoon we saw a doe but the rut is starting here so he just watched it.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Sorry to hear that, but don't feel too alone. The 100 gr. hot cores are dynamite on deer; I have used it on a bunch of them.
 
Sorry to hear that, but don't feel too alone. The 100 gr. hot cores are dynamite on deer; I have used it on a bunch of them.
I told him I would post. The little ones can keep you on your toes.
Probably said some stuff I should not have yesterday. Probably will hear about it from his mom.
I don’t believe I hit it. And am glad I didn’t
I would rather a clean miss than a wounded one.

Thanks for support.
 
Sorry to hear that. The worst part of a miss is all the uncertainty and the second guessing as "why?" Without any clear answers it affects your confidence.
My best way to clear my head is just go practice with same gun and loads until confidence returns
 
Sorry to hear that. The worst part of a miss is all the uncertainty and the second guessing as "why?" Without any clear answers it affects your confidence.
My best way to clear my head is just go practice with same gun and loads until confidence returns
Yea I know that’s the worst part.
There was nothing wrong with the rifle.
We ran a box of those loads through it.
Me my brother and even the kids.
Even put a deer target with the different organs. 3 shots in the should just like it should do.

There was no twig or anything that a bullet could have hit the Rey, oats,Reygrass and clover are less than 5in up right now.

The only thing I can think of is I might have pulled to hard on the trigger.
I don’t remember doing that.
But the rifle I had been shooting a lot lately has a very very light and Chrisp trigger.
And this one is a standard ruger m2 77 one.
 
Sometimes it just happens. A flinch, slap the trigger, etc. guaranteed to make you be more methodical next time. The biggest buck I killed, I missed him 2x across a bean filed a month prior. I was so shaken by him I lost my cool.
 
It is unnerving for sure. Respect for owning up to it
 
i was on kodiak island hunting deer after guiding brown bear on the peninsula. killed my first deer a doe at 150 yards. one shot, slap, down (shooting my 458 win)

couple days later, had a shot on another doe, (175 yards) felt good, squeezed, the gun went off, and the deer ran forward 3 steps and stopped to look around. hmmm, ran the bolt ( while it was moving the 3 steps) put the cross hairs back on the deer, touched off again and bang, down it went. how did i miss??

still not sure, but, obviously it was a me thing. i put a lot of value in the sight picture in the scope when i stroke the trigger, still not sure how i missed, but i got a do over and it worked out. so.....i get it, sometimes we just miss. dang it!!
 
It happens. I've had some shots that I made that I thought to myself, "Wow I can't believe I did that!" And I've had some misses where I thought the exact same thing. In reliving those misses, I'm all but 100% certain I was a bit excited and pulled my head at the shot instead of staying down on the gun. Perhaps that's what's happened here?
 
It happens. I've had some shots that I made that I thought to myself, "Wow I can't believe I did that!" And I've had some misses where I thought the exact same thing. In reliving those misses, I'm all but 100% certain I was a bit excited and pulled my head at the shot instead of staying down on the gun. Perhaps that's what's happened here?
It happens. I've had some shots that I made that I thought to myself, "Wow I can't believe I did that!" And I've had some misses where I thought the exact same thing. In reliving those misses, I'm all but 100% certain I was a bit excited and pulled my head at the shot instead of staying down on the gun. Perhaps that's what's happened here?
Been there, done that. My second safari I sighted in the day of arrival, hit just where I wanted. Next day my PH and I went hunting. Spotted a nice springbok at about 100yds. Took the shot and saw dirt fly right under his belly. Clean miss. Two more misses that day at under 200 yds. Couldn't believe it. Next morning we sighted in again. Right on.
Every day after that I made every shot at varying ranges. Thinking about it later I blame my misses that first day on jet lag and travel stress. It took a good night's sleep to reset me.
 
One thing I’ve surmised over the years is that when I miss, it’s 99% likely my fault and 1% likely the rifle. Sure, stuff can happen, but usually the problem is the loose nut behind the trigger. I really learned this while culling in Africa. Headshots only, on springbok, mostly around 200 yards, sometimes up to 300 yards. That isn’t necessarily easy, but completely, totally realistic if you concentrate. “Aim small, miss small.” After that, I started picking out not just the vitals, but a spot dead center in the vitals. It’s really odd how much that little mental shift made a difference.

That said, I go a little out of my mind when a really big mulie shows up. Seriously…… I go from college-educated guy with a head full of reloading and ballistics data to a twitchy 12 year-old imbecile hopped up on caffeine. I guess if that ever goes away completely, I think I’ll quit hunting.
 
I thought about changing rifles.
But if I do not sure I would ever use it again for anything serious.
And I keeping the rifle no matter what. Was a second anniversary present.
I have multiple "I missed" stories myself. One actually WAS a busted scope. (it has since been replaced) The rest were the guy pulling the trigger.... :E Shrug:
 
Good on you for keeping up a good example for your nephew.

I've often said, "if you haven't missed, you haven't hunted much"
 

Forum statistics

Threads
65,045
Messages
1,433,998
Members
134,063
Latest member
OsvaldoX99
 

 

 

Latest profile posts

Mauser3000 wrote on HBartley's profile.
Hello,

I saw your post selling left hand rifles. Do you have any additional pics of the .416 Rem mag?

Thank you.

-Nathan
Mauser3000 wrote on gbflyer's profile.
Hello, I saw your post selling left hand rifles. Do you have any other left hand rifles you may let go of? Also can you send a few additional pics of Borden rifle?

Thank you.

-Nathan
DaBill wrote on Fzj80's profile.
DaBill wrote on Dakota300's profile.
I have a question about your scope. Is the Innomount an SR-to-Picatinny mount?
Bill
robi wrote on Cheesehead's profile.
I sounds like a very Dutch name "Kaaskop":E Laugh:
 
Top