A Bowhunter’s Guide to Blood-Tracking Deer

The two key factors to recovering every arrow-shot deer are patience and practiced blood-trailing skills. Generally speaking, the more patient you are, the longer you wait before taking up the trail, and the more persistent you are, even to the point of getting down on your hands and knees and studying sign, the more successful you will be.

During my 25 years of hunting exclusively with a bow, I have shot about 250 deer. Notice, I said shot. In my early years of bowhunting, I failed to recover some animals because I began tracking too soon after the shot and had no blood-trailing knowledge. However, I did learn a lot about the recovery of animals during those first few years and have continued learning for a quarter century, and now I virtually never lose a deer.

All blood trails are different, of course, but general principles apply to the recovery of all game animals. From the experience I’ve gained in recovering my own animals and from helping other hunters trail and recover many deer, I have developed “A Bowhunter’s Guide to Blood-Trailing Deer,” a concise, easy-to-read reference chart you can carry in the woods with you. If you apply the principles in the chart on the next two pages, you won’t be hanging your head at the end of a blood trail. You will be celebrating.

General Tracking Comments
Use all of your senses. At the moment you shoot, watch and listen carefully to gather all clues. While tracking, look, listen, smell, and feel. Do not wander aimlessly, looking for the deer. Stick with the blood trail. The pointed edges of blood drops point in the direction of the deer’s travel.

In addition to looking for blood, look for tracks, broken limbs, and disturbed leaves and soil. Imbed the size, shape, and stride length of a wounded animal’s tracks in your mind so you recognize those distinct tracks immediately. Also, look for concentrations of insects and spiders. Ants, flies, daddy longlegs, and other little creatures rapidly find and feed on the blood and stomach contents along a blood trail. They will find sign you would otherwise never see.

To enlarge this blood-tracking chart, please click the image.

If you must wait several hours to track a deer — as with a paunch hit — look and listen for buzzards, ravens, crows, and jays that may have found your deer before you do. Listen for coyotes that sometimes call others when they find a ready-to-eat deer. Look for a large mound of leaves and dirt where predators or scavengers may have fed on and buried your deer. As you’re tracking, listen for the crashing sounds of a jumped deer, and listen for the sounds of labored breathing or struggling movements.

Smell your arrow to determine if it has passed through the stomach or intestines, and smell for stomach contents on the ground to assist in determining a gut-shot deer’s direction of travel. Many deer, particularly during the rut, have a strong musky smell, and a well-trained human nose can detect this smell for many yards on a steady, mild breeze. Occasionally, feel the blood while tracking to determine if clotting has begun. Also, the thickness of blood can indicate where the deer was hit. Use a dog where legal to assist in finding the deer.

Above all, be persistent. Dogged determination may be your most valuable tool in recovering any arrow-shot animal.

The author hails from Northport, Alabama.

  • http://www.missouribloodtrackers.com Jack Jones

    I used to track your way which is good. but for the last 18 years Istarted to use a dog a trained German Jagdterrier. He is alot better then I was.

    • JOEY SPROUSE

      i do the same thing

  • Steve V

    Another tool that I found usefull is a roll of toilet paper to lay down over the blood drops incase you get turned around in the woods,it helps to follow those hard to see drops and the paper will go away over time.

  • James

    Everyone has lost a deer due to not waiting long enough to track. The color and coarseness of hair on your broadhead is the BEST way to determine how long to wait.

    • jason

      THAT DOESN'T MAKE SENSE

  • Joe

    How long should you wait ? Can you explain why the color & coarseness of hair is the best way to determine how long to wait ?

    • Thwack

      The hunter is the only one who knows for sure how long to wait. You're the only one that saw where your shot hit. If you're confident that you put a good shot on him, and you saw the deer faulter on his way out, possibly heard him crash down after he left your line of site, I typically give them between a half hour and 1 hour depending on weather conditions. If you're unsure of your shot, or know that you hit the deer out of the vital area, or the deer ran off without looking like it was even injured, the best thing to do is wait at least a half hour, find your arrow and mark the spot where you first see blood….back out and come back the next day ready to track the deer. These guidelines change a little bit if you're hunting during a steady rain, or there is a threat of rain during the overnight hours, you might have to push your times up a bit. Good luck but the best way to recover all deer you shoot, is to practice, practice, practice!

      • Mat

        I agree, the best way to avoid losing a deer is to practice. Being able to make a good clean shot should be everyones main objective when bowhunting. Practicing builds confidence which comes in handy when a wall hanger walks out cuz if your like me everything starts shaking about that time and youll need that confidence to back you up.

  • WilScarletMacaw

    My son is color blind and can not distinguish between the red blood and the brown leaves. What he does is look for moisture on the leaves and ground, and he was able to track his first deer successfully that way. During wet hunts we both like to use the Game Tracker string, which is a pain when you miss but very helpful when you do not.