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Started by goindeep, March 18, 2025, 03:04:19 PM
Quote from: TrackeySauresRex on March 19, 2025, 08:54:39 AMI have also found that a non-flopping gobbler will stay still until the moment I touch him...and then all h*ll breaks loose. Consequently, if I shoot a gobbler and he is laying still, I generally just leave him alone to see what happens for a while. Regardless, it seems at some point, even a still gobbler will reach the flopping stage after being shot.
Quote from: Marc on March 19, 2025, 02:15:41 AMNot sure I understand how a non-flopping bird is a better kill???If you substantially damage the brain-stem of a bird, it is generally going to flop. While I do not have the bird count that many on here have, I would say I have killed about 80 or so birds total, and been present for a bunch of others...I have seen two birds that fell over without flopping... One I killed, and upon breaking the neck, the bird started flopping... The other my daughter killed (and she shot low with several pellets to the head and neck). Bird fell over (seemingly) dead, and I used a pithing device (to make sure), and the bird immediately started flopping.If you disengage the central nervous system of a turkey, it generally generally cause the involuntary muscle reaction of flopping.I once shot a bird at extremely close range early in my turkey hunting career... I completely removed it's head with the shot, and I chased that bird around like a drunk monkey chasing a greased football (as I did not realize the degree of damage I had caused)...What would be the theory about TSS killing a bird without flopping?
Quote from: Happy on March 19, 2025, 12:03:39 PMQuote from: Marc on March 19, 2025, 02:15:41 AMNot sure I understand how a non-flopping bird is a better kill???If you substantially damage the brain-stem of a bird, it is generally going to flop. While I do not have the bird count that many on here have, I would say I have killed about 80 or so birds total, and been present for a bunch of others...I have seen two birds that fell over without flopping... One I killed, and upon breaking the neck, the bird started flopping... The other my daughter killed (and she shot low with several pellets to the head and neck). Bird fell over (seemingly) dead, and I used a pithing device (to make sure), and the bird immediately started flopping.If you disengage the central nervous system of a turkey, it generally generally cause the involuntary muscle reaction of flopping.I once shot a bird at extremely close range early in my turkey hunting career... I completely removed it's head with the shot, and I chased that bird around like a drunk monkey chasing a greased football (as I did not realize the degree of damage I had caused)...What would be the theory about TSS killing a bird without flopping?I have killed one or two turkeys in my life and I can honestly say I have only killed one that didn't flop. He was shot with #6 hevi shot at about 25 yards. He had just passed behind a tree, walking up a small, old logging that was only about a foot lower than the surrounding ground. When I pulled the trigger, he just disappeared. I sat there for easily 5 minutes, covering the spot with my gun, and there was nothing. No flopping or sounds of rustling. I lowered the gun and sat for a while longer, and it was still silent. This is how he was when I walked up, and he didn't even twitch when I picked him up. My redneck theory is that there is a nerve or a few nerves located in their central nervous system that are a "kill switch". I think the odds of hitting those nerves with a pellet are extremely small, but occasionally, it happens. Sent from my SM-S901U using Tapatalk
Quote from: Marc on March 19, 2025, 11:49:57 PMInteresting side topic on the flopping...I will say, I am more cautious on the birds that did not flop. Either broke their necks or pith them... Which I actually do on the "floppers" as well... Having "dead" head shot ducks fly away after being piled on the blind has given me cause for caution... I have no desire for a turkey to come back to life in my vest hiking back up a steep canyon. As far as shot size, I hear #9's are a great load. That seems small to me, but it is difficult to argue with the results...My question is what is the smallest shot that can maintain downrange energy enough to penetrate bone at the ranges you are going to hunt, while also creating a large enough wound channel to immediately stop a bird? What is the largest pellet size that will maintain pattern densities necessary to kill a bird at the ranges desired?If #12 pellets carried enough energy, would they create a large enough wound channel to stop a bird?Do #6 TSS pellets provide the pattern density to put 100 pellets in a 10 inch circle at 40 yards?And... It is my understanding that larger pellet sizes will carry energy further, while also maintaining better pattern percentages out further? So what is to gain from going from #9 TSS to #7 TSS or vice versa?If #7's put 110 pellets in a 10" circle, and #9's put 180 pellets in that same circle, would hunters see any difference in efficacy (remembering that those #7's are also creating larger wound channels)? My guess would be no...Without doing a stitch of research, were I offered free 1.5 oz of TSS in any shot size, I would probably go with #8's...
Quote from: ruination on March 20, 2025, 12:11:55 PMThere an allusion to chickens here...but how about waterfowl? Stoning a duck isn't uncommon.
Quote from: Marc on March 20, 2025, 03:25:46 PMQuote from: ruination on March 20, 2025, 12:11:55 PMThere an allusion to chickens here...but how about waterfowl? Stoning a duck isn't uncommon.Yes... But half or more of stoned ducks are from massive tissue damage/shock to internal organs excluding the CNS. The percentage of head-shot ducks is much smaller than body-shot (for most of us), whereas most of us are getting close to 100% CNS kills on a turkey.Interesting topic for sure!