OK--here's the story. I was hunting pigs at one of my lighted feeders back in January and stuck this boar--spined him (1st Picture). You can see the cut in the hide which is through the entry wound. Went back a day or so later and retrieved the broadhead, embedded in a vertebrae.

Here's the broadhead, viewed from the rear, with the spine section held straight up, as if the pig is just standing normally. You can see the down angle of the arrow--about 5-degrees below horizontal. Puzzling, because I wasn't shooting from a ground blind, but from a tripod.

I measured the release point elevation and it is 12' above ground. The horizontal distance to the spot where he fell was 30' and I drew it to scale in this drawing:

Easy to see what a difference there is in the angle of arrow flight and the angle of the arrow in the boar's spine. Could he have flinched at the sound of the bow, leaning slightly away from me? Oh yeah, forgot to mention, the bh sheared off a rib on entry, and I'm betting that deflected the arrow upward, resulting in the angle of the bh in the spine.
Any other thoughts on this?

Here's the broadhead, viewed from the rear, with the spine section held straight up, as if the pig is just standing normally. You can see the down angle of the arrow--about 5-degrees below horizontal. Puzzling, because I wasn't shooting from a ground blind, but from a tripod.

I measured the release point elevation and it is 12' above ground. The horizontal distance to the spot where he fell was 30' and I drew it to scale in this drawing:

Easy to see what a difference there is in the angle of arrow flight and the angle of the arrow in the boar's spine. Could he have flinched at the sound of the bow, leaning slightly away from me? Oh yeah, forgot to mention, the bh sheared off a rib on entry, and I'm betting that deflected the arrow upward, resulting in the angle of the bh in the spine.
Any other thoughts on this?
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