I agree and the head shots I take are 50 yards or less with 22 and 100 yards or less with rifle. At those distances I can put 5 shots in an inch or less. And I wait untill the deer have settled.
5 shots into an inch or less target shooting is a lot different than in a hunting scenario where you experience stress and body alarm reactions.
Maybe you are good enough to shoot those groups in either case, but I know many shooters aren't.
As for the thread topic,
I don't understand why anyone would go with a head shot every time.
The head on any mammal is always moving, especially deer bc they're constantly on the look out for predators and any living being.
Even a "settled" deer is always looking.
A deers head is on average 18" long back of skull to nose, and 7" wide.
Target zone is roughly 2.5" x 2.5" and is technically much smaller than that.
Small target size combined with constant movement equals a low percentage shot which in my book isn't worth taking unless you have no other choice and conditions are perfect.
Firstly, hunting deer size game with a .22LR is reckless.
Yes Rimfire is accurate, no recoil, and a lot quieter,
But it has no energy and little expansion from a very small projectile.
Do those who headshot deer with .22LR do so for bragging rights?
For me, I feel best telling and hearing a hunting story when there's sound reasoning and all decisions were made based on logic and with the targets best interest in mind.
Yes a head shot would be the best way to kill, but at what risk?
If I had to tell the story of the lost deer bc I went for a head shot with my .22LR but soon as I broke the shot the wind kicked up causing me to miss my intended poi blowing its jaw off and losing the animal only to find it days later as a pile of bones which the yotes has picked clean, it would devastate me. In fact the guilt would eat at me so much that I prob wouldn't want to tell that story.
Going back to .22lr ,
I'm not sure what grain or bullet design you're using but even if you used a high velocity .22LR with a 40grain bullet,
You're impacting an animal with roughly 90 foot pounds of energy at 50 yards?
And that's if you happen to place your shot perfectly and penetrate the skull.
Headshot at 50 with weapon that delivers enough energy, in an area where you can successfully put an effective round on target should the first shot not do the job, then sure, as long as u can guarantee you're not wounding and losing, go for it I guess.
Headshots at 100 and beyond with a rifle you didn't specify (I don't think)
I don't get the point of that either.
I don't understand why anyone would take a headshot at that distance.
I could do it, over and over, but I wouldn't. The risk isn't worth the reward and honestly seems unethical.
NOW,
If it's the end of the world and all you have is ur RF then fine, you have no choice,
But in a world where nearly any centerfire would be a better choice, I really don't understand why anyone would do it and why any state would legalize deer hunting with a .22LR.
Lastly and (sorry to everyone for the longggg reply)
Saying you have lost deer shot with much larger calibers and you've never lost one with a .22LR isn't sound reasoning nor does it justify using that caliber.
A lost deer is from poor shot placement and or the terminal performance of the projectile was lacking.
Either a bad shot
The wrong bullet
Or both.