https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Ho5KrErBpng
Pretty nasty.
I have heard that sometimes deer can survive gut shot wounds.
Printable View
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Ho5KrErBpng
Pretty nasty.
I have heard that sometimes deer can survive gut shot wounds.
Looks healthy apart from the big hole in its side.
Didnt think they used SSt's in Hungary
Maybe a very light, fast varmint round from a small calibre?
Not necessarily a gun shot wound red stag I shot last year had 3 poke holes in him if they got infected could end up with a hole like that
post rut...posibly a poke from rival.
looks like he managing ok....must be skin only and the gut wall not pierced so it could heal if he survives long enough..agree the blowies would finish him off over here.
do the europeans not have blow flies???
looks like a piece of stick or antler stuck in the wound
Check this one out then
https://youtu.be/Bb8r1hD-V9g
Definitely could be an antler wound, an exit/entry wound that big would have caused so much internal damage that it's unlikely to have survived long.
Amazing how resilient they are. The fattest and largest red hind I’ve ever shot only had three legs. Living on farm land mind you but could obviously still clear fences with ease
This youtube commenter got it:
"Jason Stanley 8 days ago
How are people saying this is a bullet or arrow wound? Anyone who actually watches this video and pays even half attention can see clearly that a busted off piece of spur or antler is still stuck in the animal. Look closely and you’ll see it and I would be willing to bet that afterwards it got infected and a abscess formed and then ruptured causing this oversized wound. On any note that’s one tuff and resilient animal!!! Respect!!! "
The same is done with cattle, a second hand ships port hole or the door off a front loader washing machine is sewn into the side of their guts and bags of different feed mixes are chucked in for a couple of wash cycles and then checked to see how much lignin etc has been removed by the bacterial enzymes. Fascinating but macabre. A cannulated stag it is then !!