My next barrel for my Encore will be a .223 or .22 BR, and although they're legal in SD, where I would use it to hunt song dogs and p-dogs, I'd never use it for deer, that's what my .308 and .30-06 are for. As for the head shot debate, the second deer I ever shot was a nice whitetail does that I shot running at about 100 yds with a .243 stoked with a Nosler Partition bullet. I'd practiced running shots on rabbits with my scoped .22, so I was pretty confident. First shot she reared back and fell to the ground. I slowly walked up on her and at about 20 yds. she brought her head up and tried to get up. I decided to try a head shot to finish her off. I shot her lower jaw off and she thrashed so much I couldn't get a good shot even on her vitals, I had to watch her suffer a horribly painful experience that should have been avoided, she did settle down so I could shoot her in the chest to finish her. My first shot hit the brisket and incapacitated her, bruised the lungs and heart, but the head shot was my worst hunting experience in memory. I'm not weak stomached, but God gave us dominion over all creatures on the Earth, that doesn't mean He gave us the right to try fancy shots and wound them horribly, if I'd tried that shot without her being previously hit in the brisket, she would have run off and died of gangrene or starvation. Please reconsider your thoughts on shooting deer in the head. The deer deserves to be dispatched cleanly and mercifully, I hate seeing a wounded animal of any sort, it saddens me to know I haven't done my job properly. Don't take this as an anti-hunting stand, I grew up on wild game and feed my family on wild game, I just want to responsibly harvest my game.
Selmer