I have one I can add from just a few weeks ago. I shot an axis doe at 11yds, quartering away in her right side. Entrance hole was just a tad high, right above the crease. I watched the deer run off with everything but the fletching sticking out the left side, and knew it was a dead deer walking. Well, not quite!!!! I waited a while and began to track. The blood trail was not profuse, but very easy to follow. When I first laid eyes on her, she was still standing, and I had no weapon with me because I was sure after seeing the shot that she was gonna be dead!!! I got lucky,and she was all but done when I found her. I watched her lie down and expire. Upon inspection, what I thought I had seen was not even close to what actually happened! She twisted and turned so much that the exit hole on the left side was at least a foot behind the entrance hole. Remember, i shot the deer quartered away, so the exit should have been in or in front of the left shoulder. I wish I would have filmed this shot. The result appeared to be physically impossible. Anyone who saw that dead deer would have bet money that I shot it quartering too me, or that the entrance hole was the one on the left side!!!
Sometimes, good luck is a great thing. Either one of those situations could have turned out much worse, with an unrecovered deer. They worked out, so all is good!!
It is incredible how fast they can move! After watching a lot of shots in slow motion video, I sometimes wonder how we are ever successful. Almost all move before the arrow hits them. Soma a LOT more than others!
Bisch