My husband shoots ours.. he uses a 22 long rifle with stinger rounds. He said if you are going to shoot from across the yard make sure you're a good shot.. if you are shooting close up make sure you have something to shoot into (bale of hay.. dirt pile.. ) so you don't get any ricochets off of rocks.
the stinger rounds do a much better job than a regular target round and they are a bit better than the average hollow point as well. the only chickens he had any problems with were two "ninja chickens" who would jerk their heads out of the way at the last possible split second.. he finally chose a point blank shot with both of them..
He did hit one turkey in the neck with the stinger rounds.. nearly decapitated the bird.. so having a precise shot to the head isn't really that important if using the stingers
Normally we bind their legs with zip ties and let them rest .. they are happily pecking away at the ground and never saw what hit them. Plus he shoots from a distance (much better aim than I am.. but he's in the military and shoots a heck of a lot more than I do).
after he shoots them I lop off the heads with a tree lopper and scald right away.. never have much blood left in them after he shoots them.. so bleeding them out isn't an issue
He said it's really not a matter of shooting a chicken or turkey being a good or bad way to kill one.. because the bullet does do the job.. it depends on the skill of the person doing the shooting as to how clean of a kill it is.
the stinger rounds do a much better job than a regular target round and they are a bit better than the average hollow point as well. the only chickens he had any problems with were two "ninja chickens" who would jerk their heads out of the way at the last possible split second.. he finally chose a point blank shot with both of them..
He did hit one turkey in the neck with the stinger rounds.. nearly decapitated the bird.. so having a precise shot to the head isn't really that important if using the stingers
Normally we bind their legs with zip ties and let them rest .. they are happily pecking away at the ground and never saw what hit them. Plus he shoots from a distance (much better aim than I am.. but he's in the military and shoots a heck of a lot more than I do).
after he shoots them I lop off the heads with a tree lopper and scald right away.. never have much blood left in them after he shoots them.. so bleeding them out isn't an issue
He said it's really not a matter of shooting a chicken or turkey being a good or bad way to kill one.. because the bullet does do the job.. it depends on the skill of the person doing the shooting as to how clean of a kill it is.