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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
What does DRT mean?
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<blockquote data-quote="crkckr" data-source="post: 1736841" data-attributes="member: 78056"><p>My idea of DRT is when after the shot, the critter goes to take a step and falls on it's face... and stays there. It is the best possible shot one can achieve. "Anchored" is another good shot. The critter drops but may require a follow up shot to make it truly dead. </p><p>Anything that kills the critter to where I can still find it is also good, just not as good as drt or anchored.</p><p>Anything that requires help finding the critter is a fail as far as I'm concerned. The worst possible outcome is not being able to find it at all.</p><p>Cheers,</p><p>crkckr</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="crkckr, post: 1736841, member: 78056"] My idea of DRT is when after the shot, the critter goes to take a step and falls on it's face... and stays there. It is the best possible shot one can achieve. "Anchored" is another good shot. The critter drops but may require a follow up shot to make it truly dead. Anything that kills the critter to where I can still find it is also good, just not as good as drt or anchored. Anything that requires help finding the critter is a fail as far as I'm concerned. The worst possible outcome is not being able to find it at all. Cheers, crkckr [/QUOTE]
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What does DRT mean?
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