*#@**!! POS .22 rifle...

them suckers are tuff. one was in my friends yard last year and his dad chucked a hammer at it got knocked out. well it woke up and was crawling away and i hammered it with the gamo varmint gun and it fell down but was still alive. so we put a clip through its shoulders with the 22 it died in like 5 seconds after that.
 
I reckon all your replies are correct so far. The opossom has a brain case about 1/4 to 1/5 of a similar sized coon. Possums are marsupials so their brain structure is a little different than that of mammals. Small brain cases and small brain structures make for a small target. Human suicides that put a bullet to their temple can and have survived. They either severed their optic nerves blinding themselves or destroyed part of their cerebral cortex resulting in altered personalities and diminished life quality. A bullet through the brain stem is the only way to shut a mammallian brain down instantly. A brain stem hit will halt all cardiac and respritory function. How big is the brain stem of a possum. Pretty darn small...I'm guessing about the same caliber as a 22. I don't think I'd be able to hit that sweet spot at a few paces but I imagine a few rounds of 22 through the brain case will eventually damage the brain stem enough to do the trick.

Then again there is that primitive reptillian brain thing. I watched my Mom's cousin butcher three snappers when I was a kid. They were hung upside on a tree over night without their heads. The next day he cracked one open, cut out the heart and plopped it in may hand...the darn thing kept beating for about 5 minutes. I'm guessing the the spinal cord has enough neurons to keep part of the critter functioning. Possums are primitive critters and may share some similarities with the reptillian brain.

On another note, my childhood friend use to run a trapline. He used to use an axe handle to finish off the muskrats and coons. One day he caught a possum and after about the 20th time of cranking it in the head and the darn thing just looking at him and hissing, he swore off the axe handle and started carrying his 22. Never had a problem after that.

BTW. Have you ever notice that possums have finger prints?
 
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Head shots often result in the squiggly wigglies for a few seconds while the body's nerves and muscles malfunction. On animals of all sizes... not just small critters.
 
To bad it went the opposite way then you wanted it to. Hallow point wont do the job all the time, when shooting animal in the skull.
 
Talk about bringing a post from the dead /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif. Original post over 4 years ago /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smiliesmack.gif.

I do agree with these critters being VERY tough though. I also have had multiple situations where they've been shot in the head and are still going.
 
I hate to say it, but a there are no bad tools, only bad carpenters.

I realize that this post is quite old when I saw some of the individuals answering it. Then I looked at the date.
 
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Talk about bringing a post from the dead /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif. Original post over 4 years ago /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smiliesmack.gif.

I do agree with these critters being VERY tough though. I also have had multiple situations where they've been shot in the head and are still going.


Gotta love the irony between the original topic and someone posting on a thread 4yrs old /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif
 
yeah, i had one in the trap the other day and i shot it 14 times with my Smith and Wesson 40 caliber before it quit movin. (im sure it was dead after the first couple shots, but i needed some target practice anyway)
 
Yeah,I would have to agree it was a nerve thing he was dead after first shot.Anyone who has butchered a rooster or a turtle can tell you that there appendages will move long after there head has been severed from their body.
 
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