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Hints To Avoid Hypothermia
It doesn't have to be below freezing for hypothermia to hit -- not even close to it. Hypothermia is the loss of core body heat and comes in three grades, mild (uncomfortable), moderate (dangerous) and profound (deadly). Each can rapidly progress to the next stage if appropriate steps are not taken to remedy the matter. Hypothermia can hit at temperatures up to 60 degrees or even warmer for small children, ill or elderly people. All it takes is some sort of chilling experience that causes body temperature to drop faster than the body can make up the loss. Getting wet, exposed to cold wind or, worse, both at once, is a sure set-up for hypothermia. First symptoms are shivering, teeth chattering, slurred speech, decreasing coordination and mild disorientation. Symptoms get worse as body temperature drops. The solution is to get warm and dry as soon as possible. Get out of the wind, add insulation and seek heat. Warm liquids help increase internal temperatures, but avoid alcohol and stimulants.
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Follow Up Your Shot
Deer do not always fall or even give an indication of being hit at the shot. Always go to the spot the deer was standing and look for hair and blood sign. Some vital hits can go unnoticed. A heart-shot deer usually makes a mad dash of 50 to 75 yards. A lung-shot deer may run 200 yards. Both will be very dead when found. A hit through the heart/lung area produces pink, frothy blood. Bright red is muscle blood but it still may be a vital hit. Dark, brownish blood indicates a hit in the liver and/or paunch area. Hits in this area take some time to bring the deer down. Wait awhile before taking up the trail. Mark the blood trail with tissue paper so you can easily return to the last sign found. If the blood trail stops, circle and search the area thoroughly before giving up. While searching for a wounded deer, be ready to shoot quickly.
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Shooting The Breeze
With big clearcuts, long powerline right-of-ways, wide agricultural fields and with many hunters hunting from elevated stands, long shots at whitetails are common. Hunters need to understand trajectory and wind drift to score at long range.
Wind can significantly drift a bullet. A 20 mph crosswind will move a 140-grain bullet at 2,800 fps 1 1/3 inches at 100 yards, 5 1/2 inches at 200 and over a foot at 300 yards!
Many reloading manuals provide precise wind drift charts. However, we seldom have a way to precisely measure wind velocity between our stand and the buck on the back edge of a clear-cut.
However, we should review the charts and roughly estimate the wind to make an educated "Kentucky windage" guess. Heavier bullets at higher velocities are affected less by the wind. This makes a fair case for certain magnum cartridges for long-range shooting. However, all bullets drift in the wind, even the magnums, and the smart shooter should take it into account.
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Next Year's Deer
At the end of the season, you may stow your bow and/or gun, but you should get ready for the most productive and important scouting of the year. Winter and early spring offer you incredible insight into deer and particularly into buck habitat and behavior that will help you next season. Working sort of backwards, go out immediately after the season and find the deer. This is the late-season place and pattern you were trying to puzzle out when the buzzer went off on this season. You'll know next year. Thin winter cover also gives you the best view of the general deer habitat. Trails, rubs and old scrapes are easily found and noted. Even if a particular buck met a bullet this season, a good breeding territory won't be vacant come next rut. The real payoff in winter/early spring scouting comes when you find big shed antlers. This buck didn't meet a bullet and now you know where he lives.
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Lots Of Hunting Left
Even though a calendar year is history, you can still find lots of good hunting after the new year
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