grizzly63
Well-known member
One of the hardest game animals for me to try and get out of treestand is a Rooster Pheasant. I guess if birds of prey are trying to kill you, you have a tendency to look up constantly.
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Curious what made you settle on extra light arrows at 310+fps? I know that was a fad in the early 2000’s, you just don’t see a lot of guys doing it anymore. Has worked well for you.Farthest - 95 yards, antelope heart shot
Closest - 5 yards, elk also heart shot
On average maybe 40 yards (total guess over several dozen archery kills)
I've archery hunted annually for 39 years and lost 3 deer due to bad hits during archery that I'm fairly certain died. 2 whitetails, a buck and a doe, and one mule deer doe. Only one of those shots would be frowned upon by the ethics police.
The embarrassing statistic that I hold is rifle shot bears that I have no clue what happened - a couple at extra close range.
I've personally seen far more rodeos with bullets than arrows, but have heard a lot of bad archery losses.
I shoot extra light arrows with 100 grain fixed blade tips from a very well tuned bow (310+ fps). Have shot expandable head in past with good results, but with the right fixed and your bow set correctly, no need to worry about more moving parts. I don't mess with a dial sight, use 7 pins. For all my hunting, it seems to work best for me.
I remember those. Always wanted one.High country compound
Me too. I was shooting a PSE back then. By the time I could afford a nice bow, Mathews was the one to have.I remember those. Always wanted one.
I owned 7 different High Countrys in my life. Loved them allI remember those. Always wanted one.
Always an ad on the back page of bowhunter magazine, iirc.I owned 7 different High Countrys in my life. Loved them all