One of the job sites I frequently work at is pretty much over run with small ground squirrels. From about now until the fall they are everywhere and into everything. Needless to say, this makes them a major pest, and fair game. Too small to eat, but they don't go to waste, the ravens and occasional crow are happy to dispose of them. As I'm rather fond of the two larger black birds, it pleases me to feed them :-).
Anyway, I was on that site today, and had one of my Talons with me (of course!). Only saw two squirrels, but was able to shoot both. I typically go for head shots on these, and the first was no exception. Only about 15 yards, nice head shot, and got the usual death dance. These little guys just do not want to die! As Shadow would say, the fuse box was blown but everything else was in overdrive. This is pretty typical for these little guys, I just about always get a 10 to 20 second death dance. Some of them are pretty comical in a macabre sort of way. As usual, I put a second Kodiak in it just to speed up the process (I think).
Not too much later, number 2 shows himself. This one is more like 25 yards off, standing straight up looking at me. Put the cross hairs right between his eyes and let fly. Not sure what happened, but for some reason the shot went about an inch low, nailed him dead center, heart/lung area right in line with the shoulders, and through and through. Didn't do a postmortem, but I'm sure I cut the spinal cord as well. And this is where it got unexpected. This guy dropped on the spot, lights out and not a twitch. Both my Talons are SS's, but this one is actually set up as an SS, with a 12" .177 barrel shooting 10.6 gr. Kodiaks at about 900 fps. About 19 fpe, which is massive over kill for what I use it for, but I hit what I shoot at, and what I hit dies.
So I'm wondering if the emphasis on head shots is maybe a little off? Granted, for a body shot, this one was perfect. I'm sure I destroyed the heart and cut the spinal cord, there was instant massive blood loss as well. But I'm still surprised by the instant lights out compared to the vast majority of head shots I've made. So has anyone else gotten the same results? And I guess the real question is, is a head shot really the most humane kill we can manage? I'm really not that much of a hunter, so I'm looking forward to hearing from the regular hunters here. Later.
Dave