Official Texas bowhunting safety course Link to Texas Parks and Wildlife Department

Hello, bowhunter! Texas's online bowhunter course has moved. Click here to go to the latest version of the Bowhunter Texas course—the official bowhunting safety course of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.

The following course material is for reference only. Please go to the new course to complete your Texas certification.

Chapter 7: Shot Placement & Recovery Techniques
Shot Placement

Proper shot placement is critical in bowhunting because an arrow must be placed precisely for a quick, clean kill. The responsible bowhunter only takes a shot that can strike the vital area of the animal reliably and passes up anything less. Merely wounding an animal is a serious error that can be avoided if the bowhunter knows the vital area of the game being pursued.

Chest Cavity—The Main Vital Area

In big game animals, the bowhunter’s primary target area lies within the animal’s chest cavity. The chest cavity holds the heart, lungs, and major arteries and veins of the body, all of which are crucial to sustain life.

  • Deer shot placementA razor-sharp broadhead shot through the chest will immediately depressurize the cavity, sever lung tissue, and cause massive bleeding. It may cut lung vessels to add to the blood loss and cut heart tissue or heart vessels that will cause even more blood loss.
  • The circulatory system of a big game animal is under pressure. All cuts in the major blood vessels, lung tissue, and muscle tissue will result in an immediate and sustained blood loss.
  • The most effective shot for bowhunters on black bear and deer-sized or smaller animals is a diagonal shot (45 degrees) that angles forward and hits the liver, diaphragm, lungs, and heart.
  • The second most effective shot is the double-lung, broadside shot because it collapses both lungs. The animal leaves a good-to-excellent blood trail and typically goes a shorter distance before lying down.

Abdominal Cavity

The abdominal cavity, on the other hand, is not an aiming zone for bowhunters.

  • The abdominal cavity holds the stomach, kidneys, liver, and small and large intestines. If the arrow strikes one of these vital organs or blood vessels, the animal may bleed to death in an hour.
  • More often, a slow death begins when an arrow cuts open the stomach or intestines, spilling the contents into the abdominal cavity. The bacteria and acids in the contents cause peritonitis, a severe inflammation of the cavity. The animal becomes sick and usually dies within 8 to 12 hours.
Elk shot placement
  • There may be very little external blood loss, so tracking is very difficult. However, most animals that are gut shot don’t appear badly frightened or hurt. If undisturbed, they tend to travel a short distance and then lie down, where they die peacefully.
  • Bear shot placementEven though the liver is located in the abdominal cavity, it is often hit in a quartering-away shot because of its size and location just behind the diaphragm. The arrow may pass through the front portion of the abdominal cavity and liver on its way to the chest cavity.

Special Situation: Large Bears

  • Large bears present more of a challenge because of their bulk.
  • The bear’s shoulder is farther forward, the shoulder bones form a tighter angle, and its hair is several inches longer than other game.
  • Long, heavy hair makes a bear appear deeper in the chest than it actually is. As a result, many hunters aim too low or too far forward and hit the large shoulder bone.
  • A spot in the center of the lungs or slightly lower should be a bowhunter’s target every time.

Body Chambers of Big Game Animals

Know the Primary Aiming Zone of Your Game Animal

The Ethical Hunter

Big game animals like the white-tailed deer, elk, bear, moose, and others have anatomical features that are similar.

Big game animals have two distinct body cavities: the abdominal cavity and the chest cavity. The two cavities are separated by the diaphragm muscle, the sheet-like muscle that forms the rear of the chest cavity and helps with the breathing process.

Bowhunters need to learn the primary aiming zone of each big game animal they hunt. For example, the area just behind the front leg of a white-tailed deer—approximately the size of a paper plate—is the primary aiming zone. When shooting, the bowhunter focuses on an aiming spot—about the size of a quarter—in the center of the aiming zone. This provides a bull’s-eye over the vital organs.

Passes up the "iffy" shot, even after spending weeks preparing—and hours waiting patiently—for the opportunity

Takes satisfaction in the thrill of being up close to any game animal, even when no shot is taken

Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
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Official bowhunting safety course for Texas bowhunters last modified: March 10, 2011
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