Ole Hootwell done, sir! to quote the famous Hoot Gibson, "Miller, some people can make 'em and some people can shoot 'em. you should keep making them."
Ole Hootwell done, sir! to quote the famous Hoot Gibson, "Miller, some people can make 'em and some people can shoot 'em. you should keep making them."
I know all about this x 3gotta be prepared to shoot well in actual hunting situation where you're not getting a few warm up shots before Mr. Big steps into you shooting lane. this becomes more of an issue once it starts getting colder. sitting for three hours in 35 degrees with a 15-20 mph wind beating on you absolutely affects your ability to shoot one good arrow. I practice outside in the cold with layers, heavy coat, hat, facemask, safety harness on, too. try running a couple laps around your house to get you heart pounding, grab you bow, shoot an arrow and see how you fare. same net affect as the adrenaline rush you get when you are about to shoot an animal.
shooting nice groups of arrows into a target in your yard is good for conditioning, muscle memory and morale, but that is about it. gotta practice like we hunt. stump shooting and 3d courses are better practice. first shot is only one that matters.
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Little far back today, and unfortunately it didn’t get any better. One of them days I guess.
This strikes me as funny considering the source. I don't know many folks shooting squirrels with a 2k$ custom built rimfire...but I do know one. Lol. And the dang thing has a scope.you guys with your fancy-shmancy fiberglass bows and carbon arrahs. if I could afford one of them nice bows and some expensive arrahs I could shoot like that, too. sheesh.
Doing good BH. The shoulder makes catch and release bow hunting possible buddy.3 shots out of stand at 20 yds.
I gotta get off that shoulder.
Valid points. And is precisely the reason I rarely hunt with trad gear these days. Years ago I remember drawing on deer and it feeling like I'd never shot that particular bow before, like it was completely foreign to me. Usually after a long cold sit. I'm not willing to sit in the cold for three hours waiting to take a practice shot. I think that would be the only way for me to work through the issue.gotta be prepared to shoot well in actual hunting situation where you're not getting a few warm up shots before Mr. Big steps into you shooting lane. this becomes more of an issue once it starts getting colder. sitting for three hours in 35 degrees with a 15-20 mph wind beating on you absolutely affects your ability to shoot one good arrow. I practice outside in the cold with layers, heavy coat, hat, facemask, safety harness on, too. try running a couple laps around your house to get you heart pounding, grab you bow, shoot an arrow and see how you fare. same net affect as the adrenaline rush you get when you are about to shoot an animal.
shooting nice groups of arrows into a target in your yard is good for conditioning, muscle memory and morale, but that is about it. gotta practice like we hunt. stump shooting and 3d courses are better practice. first shot is only one that matters.
Lol just give me my old single shot Winchester 16 ga.lolThis strikes me as funny considering the source. I don't know many folks shooting squirrels with a 2k$ custom built rimfire...but I do know one. Lol. And the dang thing has a scope.