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Too deep only a matter of perspective!
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<blockquote data-quote="megalomaniac" data-source="post: 5465572" data-attributes="member: 2805"><p>In TN, there is almost no place I wouldn't shoot a good buck. I've hunted several places where I hiked in with a pack frame with the very intention of quartering/ deboning the animal and packing him out in a single trip. The flip side, I'm not shooting a doe unless I can drive right to her.</p><p></p><p>Out west, I've had to pass up a couple elk because there would have been no possible way to get to them if they ran/ fell off the top of the mountain on the wrong side. General rule of thumb... if I cant get to the animal and recover the meat in time to ensure it doesn't go to waste, I won't shoot it... varies by daytime temperatures, terrain, and whether I'm hunting solo or with a friend (packout with a friend is twice as fast as a solo packout).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="megalomaniac, post: 5465572, member: 2805"] In TN, there is almost no place I wouldn't shoot a good buck. I've hunted several places where I hiked in with a pack frame with the very intention of quartering/ deboning the animal and packing him out in a single trip. The flip side, I'm not shooting a doe unless I can drive right to her. Out west, I've had to pass up a couple elk because there would have been no possible way to get to them if they ran/ fell off the top of the mountain on the wrong side. General rule of thumb... if I cant get to the animal and recover the meat in time to ensure it doesn't go to waste, I won't shoot it... varies by daytime temperatures, terrain, and whether I'm hunting solo or with a friend (packout with a friend is twice as fast as a solo packout). [/QUOTE]
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