Roughwater
Active member
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2015
- Messages
- 246
If you have maintained your physical therapy and are in reasonable shape there is no reason not to hunt.
That is so very true. We all could use some extra incentive to give us a reason to keep moving. Here in NC, though I like to deer hunt, it don't require much from me. All I need to be able to do is be able to @#)(# a cross bow or rifle and maybe walk a hundred yards to a stand. With a plan in my mind to Elk hunt I know I need to get fit and Ideally keep fit. Push my self away from the dinner table when desert is served, generally eat much better and avoid the high carb snacks I love that are so easy to reach for and require no preparation. I know there will come a time when age will get the better of me but for now a Elk hunt every year is my best plan. My wife don't quite understand my incentive to continue to try to Elk hunt but it's the only thing that gives me enough incentive to really try to better my health and strength. At 70 I know I probably could have got a note from my Dr so I could hunt with a crossbow. But I worked back into using a compound having to set it at 50 lb as that is all I could pull. Gradually with shooting it almost every day since February I worked up to 64 lb but dropped back to 61 lb for hunting. Initially, I was hoping to just work up to 55 lb. My eyes aren't the best and I shake a little which all limits the range I can shoot but I'm dealing with it and thankful I can shoot a compound again and I'm actually enjoying it and wondered why I ever quit? A crossbow is easier to shoot but it just don't give a person the the real bow experience as it's more like shooting a gun. Some folks seem to thrive just fine just living like they are old and accepting it. I just can't live that way, struggling to push myself up from a chair or couch with my main daily activity is looking toward my next meal. I'm not tough enough to live like that but still strong enough to be able not to have to.