the thing about judging deer you find dead in the woods - with perhaps an arrow in the head.. well it might not at all reflect the archer or the shot.
This year I had a broadside shot at a whitetail doe at about 6 yards. I had a clean release; but the deer swung its head around so fast I hit it in the head. It took off running left and right and jumping and such; and I lost the blood trail; and lost the deer. Turns out it fell into the river and was downstream and out of sight of where I could legally trespass. I did NOT take a head on shot; I did NOT shoot at the head. It is where the arrow ended up; but it was NOT intentional.
I was once in a treestand and shot at a buck 20 yards away. A broadside shot. That deer flipped when I shot and I hit it on the bottom of its belly and the arrow came out between the shoulder and the backbone; at the top of its back; and buried itself in the ground- the deer broke the broadhead and part of the shaft off in the ground when it took off.
I did not shoot at the bottom of the belly of a deer from a treestand 20 feet up. I did not ever think I could hit a deer on the underside of its belly and have the arrow go through and bury itself in the ground- as it left the deer.
I found that deer pretty close and very dead.
Timing- timing was the key. I did not totally account for timing. I don't know if I could have accounted for timing and the reaction of those two deer.
too shorts description of the shot he took on the elk- sounds totally responsible and logical to me. It could though I guess be considered head on... but there were like SOOO many other things going on; like him recognizing the shot opprotunity and figuring in all the varibles ... and making the shot!
A double lung shot takes a deer down fast; but talk to bear hunters; and they will argue about the total ethics of the 'over the hip' shot - over a broadside shot.
NO- don't take head on shots; but don't take broadside shots at hyper alert deer; and don't take broadside shots at alert deer without allowing for the drop the animal- will or might- take if it drops to run. And don't take 'texas heart shots'unless.. or quarting away shots at the left side of elk...unless.
Hey- best plan is to take the best shot you can and use a sharp broadhead and committ to finding the animal you hit.
I might perhaps take a head on shot- like Paul did -when asked about taking- a head on shot.
LOL