« Reply #11 on: May 13, 2010, 03:17:01 PM »
No, but I have had some bad experiences.
Youmight get some holier-than-thou sermons on not taking shots that aren't sure things, but no shot in the wild is a sure thing. There are just too many variables. So, you have to be prepared to take the quick follow up coup de gras, or use the boot or knife. That really is part of pointing a rifle at a critter.
Killing isn't for everyone, for sure. Still no reason to hang up the irons, there is plenty of fun to be had and skills to be honed, shooting paper and reactive targets. Guns aren't about killing unless you think they are.
If you are shooting for food or pest control you gotta steel yourself. But you can shoot for the pure joy of connecting a parabola with a distant target and no harm done.
Whatever happened to your squirrel was quicker than what happens in the natural world. Animal kills often start with eating the victim while still alive. Just polish the bugger off quickly and it'll be way ahead of what nature has in store. There is nothing crueler than a cat.

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