yoderjac
5 year old buck +
Since there may be many newer bowhunter reading this, I want to be clear about a few things:
1) Bowhunting, by its nature, has risks to wounding and not recovering deer. 1,000 little things need to go right for the hunter to succeed and only 1 little thing needs to go wrong for the animal to escape, or much worse for it to be wounded and not recovered. We all accept these risks when we choose to bowhunt.
2) We do everything in our power to choose equipment that matches our skills and abilities, our need for challenge, and gives us the most margin for error when things do go wrong.
3) Never intentionally take a shoulder shot. Limit your shot selection. Even when the shot distance and selection is well within our abilities, things happen in the field that our out of our control. Leave yourself a margin of safety.
4) When things go wrong, and they will, even you when do everything right sometimes, use the situation as a learning opportunity. Ask yourself, what went wrong. Should have I done something differently? If so, make changes for the future.
5) While it is disheartening to lose any deer, regardless of size sex, make every if you make every legal attempt to recover it, you've shown respect for the animal and keep in mind, even if it dies, it goes back into the cycle of life.
On one end of the spectrum we will have arrogant folks who think their shooting abilities at the range are indicative of the shots they can take in field conditions and will overreach. On the other end of the spectrum we will have bowhunter who are constantly kicking themselves in the pants for things well out of their control. The best bowhunters find the right balance in the middle.
This thread is a good post-mortem on things to think about when something goes wrong.
Thanks,
Jack
1) Bowhunting, by its nature, has risks to wounding and not recovering deer. 1,000 little things need to go right for the hunter to succeed and only 1 little thing needs to go wrong for the animal to escape, or much worse for it to be wounded and not recovered. We all accept these risks when we choose to bowhunt.
2) We do everything in our power to choose equipment that matches our skills and abilities, our need for challenge, and gives us the most margin for error when things do go wrong.
3) Never intentionally take a shoulder shot. Limit your shot selection. Even when the shot distance and selection is well within our abilities, things happen in the field that our out of our control. Leave yourself a margin of safety.
4) When things go wrong, and they will, even you when do everything right sometimes, use the situation as a learning opportunity. Ask yourself, what went wrong. Should have I done something differently? If so, make changes for the future.
5) While it is disheartening to lose any deer, regardless of size sex, make every if you make every legal attempt to recover it, you've shown respect for the animal and keep in mind, even if it dies, it goes back into the cycle of life.
On one end of the spectrum we will have arrogant folks who think their shooting abilities at the range are indicative of the shots they can take in field conditions and will overreach. On the other end of the spectrum we will have bowhunter who are constantly kicking themselves in the pants for things well out of their control. The best bowhunters find the right balance in the middle.
This thread is a good post-mortem on things to think about when something goes wrong.
Thanks,
Jack