I kind of figured that Don and I actually agreed, or close to it. As far as Don's comments about shot placement, he is RIGHT ON THE MONEY! Over bowing yourself is a really bad problem. You must be able to control your arrow and make it go exactly where you want it to go.
A great wee book, "The Perfect Shot" shows all the anatomy of African animals and really helps with WHERE you hit the animal.
Many bowhunters will shoot, for example, a Kudu or a Gemsbok, by going up to the elbow, then going directly up about 6 inches to pick their spot. Some even go up and BACK a couple of inches. Both shots are NOT the optimum shot, especially if you go BACK. Go up to the elbow, go from there about 6 inches up, AND THEN GO FORWARD ABOUT 4 INCHES!!!!! This is in the "V" where the leg bone leaves the elbow and goes forward to the shoulder. From there it goes up and back to the shoulder blade. I call it the magic triangle.
Remember, African animals are far tougher than our critters in North America and bleed less in most cases.
I'm heading to Namibia for Leopard and plains game in 6 days and I have been studying Leopard anatomy constantly and shooting at least 100 arrows a day. I'm just hoping that I can figure out which spot to pick when that Leopard shows up!
Too Short