I think there is a certain randomness to the way squirrels react to being shot. Maybe, as has been suggested, it matters if they are relaxed or not. I hit one with my P35-25 in the front of the head in front of the eye and it was DRT. Definitely was not a brain shot but it was still DRT (skull was crushed). I hit another half an inch or so behind the shoulder and it went maybe 3 feet and dropped. Again with the P35-25. I think that shot was at best borderline too far back. But still the squirrel died very quickly. The one that I mention in this thread took a 177 pellet to the throat. Slashed major veins and/or arteries but still survived a minute or so. Climbed a little on three legs. I think that is just a different reaction than the two I mention with the 25 caliber P35. I don't think the 177 squirrel was hit worse, I think it was more determined to get away and the hole in it was not as large because it was made by a 177 pellet.
But when we do not hit the brain or spine we are depending on the animal to bleed enough to stop it. Hitting it well is part of that but how big a hole we make is part of it too, I think. A 25 caliber pellet has about twice the cross sectional area as a 177 pellet. A 22 is about halfway in-between. I don't think making a smaller hole helps the squirrel bleed out quickly. Usually I've seen squirrels react to neck shots like brain shots. Including doing the "dance". But when I hit this one in the throat, it was more like a body shot through the lungs that didn't hit the heart. It had to bleed enough for the brain to shut down. I just don't think the 177 does that as well as the bigger calibers, especially the 25 (never used anything bigger).
I am not trying to put down or criticize the 177. But I think it is questionable to put squirrels down quickly with what could be called "body shots". Shots that kill by the animal bleeding enough to shut down. It works but just not as quickly as a bigger caliber would. In my yard I worry about them moving to my neighbors yard and I think I got lucky yesterday. I think I need to limit my 177 to brain shots for backyard duty. I also hunt public property, however, and I wouldn't be worried about a 177 body shot there. I also decided to avoid front of chest shots with my bigger airguns in my yard after having two of two hit with the 25 run a significant distance with a 25 caliber hole through them lengthwise. It's another killing shot and I would consider it a humane shot but it is not a good anchoring shot. I would put 177 body shots in the same category. Humane and kill shots but not anchoring shots.
But when we do not hit the brain or spine we are depending on the animal to bleed enough to stop it. Hitting it well is part of that but how big a hole we make is part of it too, I think. A 25 caliber pellet has about twice the cross sectional area as a 177 pellet. A 22 is about halfway in-between. I don't think making a smaller hole helps the squirrel bleed out quickly. Usually I've seen squirrels react to neck shots like brain shots. Including doing the "dance". But when I hit this one in the throat, it was more like a body shot through the lungs that didn't hit the heart. It had to bleed enough for the brain to shut down. I just don't think the 177 does that as well as the bigger calibers, especially the 25 (never used anything bigger).
I am not trying to put down or criticize the 177. But I think it is questionable to put squirrels down quickly with what could be called "body shots". Shots that kill by the animal bleeding enough to shut down. It works but just not as quickly as a bigger caliber would. In my yard I worry about them moving to my neighbors yard and I think I got lucky yesterday. I think I need to limit my 177 to brain shots for backyard duty. I also hunt public property, however, and I wouldn't be worried about a 177 body shot there. I also decided to avoid front of chest shots with my bigger airguns in my yard after having two of two hit with the 25 run a significant distance with a 25 caliber hole through them lengthwise. It's another killing shot and I would consider it a humane shot but it is not a good anchoring shot. I would put 177 body shots in the same category. Humane and kill shots but not anchoring shots.
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