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bow season vs rifle season

 
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bow season vs rifle season - 12/1/2008 7:37:15 PM   
buckdog


Posts: 10
Joined: 11/29/2008
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which season do you think is better????????????????????????

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Post #: 1
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/1/2008 9:14:19 PM   
paulie

 

Posts: 480
Joined: 10/23/2008
From: SE MICHIGAN
Status: offline
Which one do I prefer? Tough call, I mean with a firearm, you've got a lot more reach, but I think, its more exciting to hunt with a bow!

(in reply to buckdog)
Post #: 2
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/1/2008 9:17:55 PM   
JPH


Posts: 2588
Joined: 4/24/2008
Status: offline
Bow.

(in reply to paulie)
Post #: 3
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/1/2008 10:08:45 PM   
RatherBeHuntin24/7

 

Posts: 51
Joined: 10/20/2008
Status: offline
Bow hunting is more rewarding for me.

(in reply to JPH)
Post #: 4
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/1/2008 10:13:38 PM   
passin through


Posts: 740
Joined: 7/8/2008
From: North Louisiana
Status: offline
Bow...but the heat sucks....
Gun ...but you lose so much of the hunt.
I like em' both!

(in reply to buckdog)
Post #: 5
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/1/2008 11:29:40 PM   
JOEL


Posts: 1099
Joined: 5/6/2008
Status: offline
bow nothing like unpressured deer and getting up close and personal with em

_____________________________

"Go afield with a good attitude, with respect for the wildlife you hunt and for the forest and fields in which you walk. Immerse yourself in the outdoor experience. It will cleanse your soul and make you a better person." - Fred Bear

(in reply to passin through)
Post #: 6
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 12:05:34 AM   
DoeEyed


Posts: 675
Joined: 12/1/2008
From: Door County, WI.
Status: offline
Deffinitely bow. Nothing like a quiet day in the woods with unpressured deer

(in reply to JOEL)
Post #: 7
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 1:41:33 AM   
Ugnasty77

 

Posts: 55
Joined: 11/19/2008
From: Wisconsin
Status: offline
Well i must say i love the challenge of bow hunting. Going out all season long, hunting in the same stand, seeing everthing go from green, to the wonderful orange and golden colors of autumn, and then die off, only to wait for the first snow fall. You cannot paint a better picture than that, and if a deer so happens to come along and your able to get em, well thats just icing on the cake.

But i also do love going up north for the opening weekend of the gun hunt, being one of the guys, seeing the first snowfall of the year if we're lucky enough to be there at that time, and of course after the hunt, when you are dead from just sitting in the woods overwhelmed by all the fresh air and the walking through the brush, but still finding the energy to go out to the bars for a couple hours for a couple beers, a good meal, shootin the shit (which is sometimes all you shoot that year), and a ton of laughs. Listening to my the older guys tell stories of what it was like 30 years ago when they would go up there and hunt and all the deer they killed over thoes years.

Both seasons have their own special qualites, and although i havent hunted as many years as most of you, i have memories that will stick with me for the rest of my life from both season.

(in reply to DoeEyed)
Post #: 8
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 2:46:05 AM   
Goose


Posts: 2675
Joined: 8/20/2008
From: Eastern Farmland
Status: offline
Hands down BOW

_____________________________

Jake

Genesis 27:3 Take your bow and quiver full of arrows out into the open country, and hunt some wild game.....

(in reply to Ugnasty77)
Post #: 9
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 7:59:24 AM   
shaman


Posts: 1485
Joined: 6/21/2008
From: Neave, KY
Status: online
Okay, I'll go against the flow here and say modern centerfire rifle season.  Mind you, up until 2007, I was a dedicated bowhunter for all of 24 seasons.  I have crawled on my knees to get out to my stand after surgery. I have gone bow hunting during snow emergencies.  Also, I am not trying to disparage bow or any other hunting pursuit.  If my shoulder had been in better shape, I would have been out this year too.

So why do I say rifle? 

Lifestyle:

My hunting situation has changed dramatically over the years.  When I started bow hunting back in the early 80's, I was a single, unfettered urbanite, and I liked the chance to get away from it all.  Bow hunting was a replacement for caving, climbing, and other dangerous endevors. I got the feeling that if I kept on the way I was going my number was going to be up pretty soon.  Bow hunting was my retirement.  I bowhunted as intensely as I'd done the other stuff.

Then I got married ( to a bowhunter) and started having kids, and all of a sudden it was no longer practical to keep it up the way I had.  Bowhunting got to be a half-day/once-a-week thing.  For a guy who lives in the 'burbs with a wife and kids, it is hard to keep up the practice and hard to put the time in the field. Bowhunting is a very solitary pursuit. It does not mix well with small children.

Passing it On:

I have 3 sons.  Two like hunting.  One courted the bow for a while. He may go back. Another just has not had a willingness to put in the time.  The fact of the matter is that small kids can shoot, but until they can pull a 40 lb bow in this state, they can't bowhunt.  My sons were done with Hunter Ed early, and were out with me even earlier.  However, the basic fact is they could not have withstood the rigors of bowhunting early on.  Firearms were the answer.  Also, I found it extremely hard having a kid and a bow in a stand-- even a buddy stand.  I have seen kids as young as 3 take deer in Kentucky. You just cannot do that with a bow.

Practice, Practice, Practice:

Part of the reason I screwed up my shoulder was that they passed a local ordinance barring me from practicing in my own back yard. I also had a neighbor who came over and told me he intended to see the law was enforced and pointed out my target.  The nearest archery range was a half-hour ride. Lack of practice, lack of room, etc. etc.  You get the idea.  On weekends, I'm out on the farm scouting. I'm in with the deer and turkey. The last thing I want to do is be stuck looking at a hay bale or stuck at a shooting bench with my rifles.

Age:
When I messed up my shoulder a year ago August, I was just shooting my bow.  I felt a twinge and gave up for the day.  By the next day I had pain, and I had pain until Thanksgiving and beyond-- could not lift my arm  over my head.  49 is not 29 or even 39.  Now I am 50.  If I screw something up, I know I'll be feeling it for a while.

The other thing that just sucks about growing old is eyesight.  I found I just could not see the pins and the game anymore.  I tried a red-dot scope, and a couple other gadgets, but I found two things were happening to my eyes. One was focus, and the other was the ability to discern detail in shadow.  When I looked through a peep sight at a pin, what was beyond was now a black curtain.  My last few seasons, my eyes were giving out long before legal light.  With the right optics, that does not seem to be be a problem with a rifle.

This is not true for everyone.  One of my fellow pro-staffers at Heirloom, Ralph, took up traditional bow in his eighties.  He's still out there hunting at 84, bagging deer in Hawaii. 

Complexities:

For you guys that are up to your eyeballs in it, I know this is a hard thing to see.  I was there too, until about 8 years ago.  Bow hunting ends up being really 4 things in one. It's like trying to tapdance while playing badmitton in the middle of a baseball game.  You've got the climbing treestand-- those are a hobby unto themselves.  Then you have all the gadgets-- the scent bombs, the calls, the decoys, etc.  Then you have the whole archery thing.  The deer themselves become of tertiary importance after you get all that going.  About 4 years ago, I went out on an unseasonably hot October afternoon, and became overcome by the heat.  I had to dump the climber, dump the decoy, dump the bow, and dump all the gadgets and crawl back to camp and dowse myself with the garden hose to keep from succumbing.  It was an epiphany. 

This may sound counter-intuitive, but a bow was frankly getting in the way-- both in aspect of practice, and in the aspect of having to pick hunting venues that required close encounters.  Don't get me wrong, I'm still taking the majority of my shots that would be easy chip shots with the bow.  However, I now give myself permission to situate a stand where a 50-60 yard shot isn't out of the question. This year, I bagged one at 150 yards.  I didn't feel any better shooting that far, but I really did not feel any worse.

Seasons:

Ohio is really a bowhunters paradise.  They hold off the shotgun season until December, and there is non-stop bowhunting from October to January. That's where I bowhunted.  Then I moved my hunting to Kentucky, because I acquired 200 acres.  Kentucky seasons are different.  Bow starts in September, but it really is quite hot in September.  October is great, but you have Yute Season and early Smokepole Season and then there's a week and then Rifle Season starts.  KY is a fantastic place for firearm enthusiasts.  In a lot of ways, I went with the flow. In September, I had to face up to the fact that I'm really not into bow hunting yet.  Even when I could, I was holding off until Oct 1.

Shaman, what is it you really want?

Good question.  I finally sat down and asked that question.  I realized that in 4 of the 7 seasons I had been on the farm in KY, I had passed on great deer in archery season, because I wanted tags left for rifle season. Bow had become a hindrance to scouting for rifle season, and practice for bow was getting in the way of enjoying the other early seasons (like squirrel) with my sons.  I was now down to 2 weekends of bow a year in October. One in November, and then the freezer was getting filled so bow hunting was no longer an option after Thanksgiving.  On top of that, I found that for all my years of hunting, what I really enjoyed was the time afield. Actually killing a deer was sort of an anti-climax. 


So why rifle?  Why not smokepole? Why not crossbow?

Honestly, I think I just put the issue of method aside.  I still do not ascribe to this whole "4 Stages of Hunter Evolution" thing.  I really don't consider myself a Sportsman, and I'm certainly not a trophy hunter.  Put me in the right mood and I'll still put the crosshairs on a three-legged doe.  When it comes to it, I realize I love reloading and load development.  I haven't shot a factory load at a deer since the early Nineties.  I also love being out with the deer and turkeys.   What it really comes down to is that when I'm out scouting, I'm out scouting. When I am out to fill the freezer, I'm out to kill.  The difference between a bow at 20 yards and 30-06 at 20 yards is tremendous.

I remember my first bow kill.  I nailed the buck pefectly with a broadside shot at 10 yards, and he took off with my arrow sticking out of his side.  I waited a half-hour, and then went down and found the shaft of the arrow and 10 yards of blood and then nothing.  I tried for the next half hour to find a drop of blood.  I  just sworn off deer hunting entirely, when in the failing light, I looked out into a pasture and saw the big buck dead in the middle of the field a hundred yards away.

When the Big One came out last year, I plugged him inside easy bow range with a slightly downloaded 308 Win, and I was glad I did.  Wham, Bang, Done.  No half-hour wait. No blood trailing.  He ran towards the neighbor's fence and collapsed about 10 yards from crossing it. 

When smokepole season comes around, I'm out with my Hawken.  If KY opens up the crossbow season to include all of bow season, I may buy one. It will be a few years, and by then my youngest will be close to hunting on his own.


So there you are.  My hunting buddy Hugh, armed with a 4X scope on his bow told me years ago: "I'm 49, and I can see the writing on the wall.  I don't know how many more of these seasons I'm going to have, but I plan on enjoying them."  He shot and missed twice that year.  I suspect his eyes had something to do with it.  After that, he moved off and I never saw him again.

_____________________________

Genesis 9:2-4 Ministries of SW Bracken County, KY
Confessions of a Cervid Serial Killer

(in reply to Goose)
Post #: 10
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 10:04:02 AM   
buckhunter21


Posts: 2793
Joined: 4/25/2008
From: West-Central WI
Status: offline
I would have to say bow...But it's followed closely by the gun season just for the fact that we have a lot of tradition with our friends and family getting together for that.  Sure that's the same for a lot of you...

(in reply to Ugnasty77)
Post #: 11
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 10:12:32 AM   
DeanoZ

 

Posts: 1073
Joined: 10/9/2008
From: New Jersey
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: JOEL

bow nothing like unpressured deer and getting up close and personal with em


I'm with joel on that one..for me its definately Bow

(in reply to JOEL)
Post #: 12
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 10:22:08 AM   
dmcianfa


Posts: 497
Joined: 9/23/2008
From: Upriver
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: shaman

Okay, I'll go against the flow here and say modern centerfire rifle season.  Mind you, up until 2007, I was a dedicated bowhunter for all of 24 seasons.  I have crawled on my knees to get out to my stand after surgery. I have gone bow hunting during snow emergencies.  Also, I am not trying to disparage bow or any other hunting pursuit.  If my shoulder had been in better shape, I would have been out this year too.

So why do I say rifle? 

Lifestyle:

My hunting situation has changed dramatically over the years.  When I started bow hunting back in the early 80's, I was a single, unfettered urbanite, and I liked the chance to get away from it all.  Bow hunting was a replacement for caving, climbing, and other dangerous endevors. I got the feeling that if I kept on the way I was going my number was going to be up pretty soon.  Bow hunting was my retirement.  I bowhunted as intensely as I'd done the other stuff.

Then I got married ( to a bowhunter) and started having kids, and all of a sudden it was no longer practical to keep it up the way I had.  Bowhunting got to be a half-day/once-a-week thing.  For a guy who lives in the 'burbs with a wife and kids, it is hard to keep up the practice and hard to put the time in the field. Bowhunting is a very solitary pursuit. It does not mix well with small children.

Passing it On:

I have 3 sons.  Two like hunting.  One courted the bow for a while. He may go back. Another just has not had a willingness to put in the time.  The fact of the matter is that small kids can shoot, but until they can pull a 40 lb bow in this state, they can't bowhunt.  My sons were done with Hunter Ed early, and were out with me even earlier.  However, the basic fact is they could not have withstood the rigors of bowhunting early on.  Firearms were the answer.  Also, I found it extremely hard having a kid and a bow in a stand-- even a buddy stand.  I have seen kids as young as 3 take deer in Kentucky. You just cannot do that with a bow.

Practice, Practice, Practice:

Part of the reason I screwed up my shoulder was that they passed a local ordinance barring me from practicing in my own back yard. I also had a neighbor who came over and told me he intended to see the law was enforced and pointed out my target.  The nearest archery range was a half-hour ride. Lack of practice, lack of room, etc. etc.  You get the idea.  On weekends, I'm out on the farm scouting. I'm in with the deer and turkey. The last thing I want to do is be stuck looking at a hay bale or stuck at a shooting bench with my rifles.

Age:
When I messed up my shoulder a year ago August, I was just shooting my bow.  I felt a twinge and gave up for the day.  By the next day I had pain, and I had pain until Thanksgiving and beyond-- could not lift my arm  over my head.  49 is not 29 or even 39.  Now I am 50.  If I screw something up, I know I'll be feeling it for a while.

The other thing that just sucks about growing old is eyesight.  I found I just could not see the pins and the game anymore.  I tried a red-dot scope, and a couple other gadgets, but I found two things were happening to my eyes. One was focus, and the other was the ability to discern detail in shadow.  When I looked through a peep sight at a pin, what was beyond was now a black curtain.  My last few seasons, my eyes were giving out long before legal light.  With the right optics, that does not seem to be be a problem with a rifle.

This is not true for everyone.  One of my fellow pro-staffers at Heirloom, Ralph, took up traditional bow in his eighties.  He's still out there hunting at 84, bagging deer in Hawaii. 

Complexities:

For you guys that are up to your eyeballs in it, I know this is a hard thing to see.  I was there too, until about 8 years ago.  Bow hunting ends up being really 4 things in one. It's like trying to tapdance while playing badmitton in the middle of a baseball game.  You've got the climbing treestand-- those are a hobby unto themselves.  Then you have all the gadgets-- the scent bombs, the calls, the decoys, etc.  Then you have the whole archery thing.  The deer themselves become of tertiary importance after you get all that going.  About 4 years ago, I went out on an unseasonably hot October afternoon, and became overcome by the heat.  I had to dump the climber, dump the decoy, dump the bow, and dump all the gadgets and crawl back to camp and dowse myself with the garden hose to keep from succumbing.  It was an epiphany. 

This may sound counter-intuitive, but a bow was frankly getting in the way-- both in aspect of practice, and in the aspect of having to pick hunting venues that required close encounters.  Don't get me wrong, I'm still taking the majority of my shots that would be easy chip shots with the bow.  However, I now give myself permission to situate a stand where a 50-60 yard shot isn't out of the question. This year, I bagged one at 150 yards.  I didn't feel any better shooting that far, but I really did not feel any worse.

Seasons:

Ohio is really a bowhunters paradise.  They hold off the shotgun season until December, and there is non-stop bowhunting from October to January. That's where I bowhunted.  Then I moved my hunting to Kentucky, because I acquired 200 acres.  Kentucky seasons are different.  Bow starts in September, but it really is quite hot in September.  October is great, but you have Yute Season and early Smokepole Season and then there's a week and then Rifle Season starts.  KY is a fantastic place for firearm enthusiasts.  In a lot of ways, I went with the flow. In September, I had to face up to the fact that I'm really not into bow hunting yet.  Even when I could, I was holding off until Oct 1.

Shaman, what is it you really want?

Good question.  I finally sat down and asked that question.  I realized that in 4 of the 7 seasons I had been on the farm in KY, I had passed on great deer in archery season, because I wanted tags left for rifle season. Bow had become a hindrance to scouting for rifle season, and practice for bow was getting in the way of enjoying the other early seasons (like squirrel) with my sons.  I was now down to 2 weekends of bow a year in October. One in November, and then the freezer was getting filled so bow hunting was no longer an option after Thanksgiving.  On top of that, I found that for all my years of hunting, what I really enjoyed was the time afield. Actually killing a deer was sort of an anti-climax. 


So why rifle?  Why not smokepole? Why not crossbow?

Honestly, I think I just put the issue of method aside.  I still do not ascribe to this whole "4 Stages of Hunter Evolution" thing.  I really don't consider myself a Sportsman, and I'm certainly not a trophy hunter.  Put me in the right mood and I'll still put the crosshairs on a three-legged doe.  When it comes to it, I realize I love reloading and load development.  I haven't shot a factory load at a deer since the early Nineties.  I also love being out with the deer and turkeys.   What it really comes down to is that when I'm out scouting, I'm out scouting. When I am out to fill the freezer, I'm out to kill.  The difference between a bow at 20 yards and 30-06 at 20 yards is tremendous.

I remember my first bow kill.  I nailed the buck pefectly with a broadside shot at 10 yards, and he took off with my arrow sticking out of his side.  I waited a half-hour, and then went down and found the shaft of the arrow and 10 yards of blood and then nothing.  I tried for the next half hour to find a drop of blood.  I  just sworn off deer hunting entirely, when in the failing light, I looked out into a pasture and saw the big buck dead in the middle of the field a hundred yards away.

When the Big One came out last year, I plugged him inside easy bow range with a slightly downloaded 308 Win, and I was glad I did.  Wham, Bang, Done.  No half-hour wait. No blood trailing.  He ran towards the neighbor's fence and collapsed about 10 yards from crossing it. 

When smokepole season comes around, I'm out with my Hawken.  If KY opens up the crossbow season to include all of bow season, I may buy one. It will be a few years, and by then my youngest will be close to hunting on his own.


So there you are.  My hunting buddy Hugh, armed with a 4X scope on his bow told me years ago: "I'm 49, and I can see the writing on the wall.  I don't know how many more of these seasons I'm going to have, but I plan on enjoying them."  He shot and missed twice that year.  I suspect his eyes had something to do with it.  After that, he moved off and I never saw him again.


Why is it everyone of your replies has to be longer than war and peace.  Man, I don't even read your posts anymore cause they are so long, drawn out and often your life story.  Just answer the question, PLEASE GOD MAN, just answer the question and maybe have a short reason why.  Sorry if I upset you, but I'm guessing some people on the forum are having similar reactions and your posts are not even getting read, and I'm sure you don't want that right?

Oh, by the way, I like bow season more because it is slightly more engaging to me, but I like the commradity that gun season brings with deer camp as a close second.

< Message edited by dmcianfa -- 12/2/2008 10:24:42 AM >


_____________________________

"I enjoy and become completely immersed in the challenge and the increased opportunity to become for a time a part of nature. Deer hunting is a classical exercise in freedom. It’s a return to fundamentals that I distinctly feel are basic and right"-F.B.

(in reply to shaman)
Post #: 13
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 10:37:10 AM   
msbadger

 

Posts: 1802
Joined: 6/4/2008
Status: offline
Ouch ...I'll have to watch my self...lol

Bow..... hands down ...for the hunt
gun...... for camp and filling freezer

(in reply to dmcianfa)
Post #: 14
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 10:54:23 AM   
69Viking


Posts: 747
Joined: 10/1/2008
From: Fort Walton Beach, FL
Status: offline
I agree with Dmcianfa, I stopped reading Shaman's book about halfway through.  He does get some of his posts in the DDH Magazine so maybe that's what he's shooting for with the long posts.  Now Dmcianfa, did you have to quote it so it shows up again!?!?

I haven't bow hunted yet unless you count a crossbow which I know a lot of you don't!  I've only hunted with it a couple times through one season and have yet to see a deer I could shoot with it. 

So that would make my choice rifle.  I think regardless my favorite will be rifle.  I love the challenge of being able to hit a deer from over 150 yards away and watch it fall over in it's tracks! 

Don't get me wrong, the first time I have a deer within 20 yeards or so and have my crossbow I might change my mind! 

(in reply to dmcianfa)
Post #: 15
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 10:58:59 AM   
schlupis

 

Posts: 783
Joined: 7/22/2008
Status: offline
Bow hands down no comparison.

But You cant beat the tradition of deer camp in wisconsin, during gun season...

(in reply to buckdog)
Post #: 16
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 11:55:11 AM   
shaman


Posts: 1485
Joined: 6/21/2008
From: Neave, KY
Status: online
How about this:  Rifle.

Look, I'm sorry if I'm honking folks off.  It's just that y'all get me to thinking.  Honestly, it's been a hard battle deciding to put down the bow-- maybe for good. I've been sort of . . . conflicted.

No, I'm not shooting for Contributor of the Year at D&DH, but I am working on a couple of books on deer hunting-- have a tendency to use here and the weblog as a sketchbook. 


PS:  Thanks for pointing out that I made it into the mag.  I'd not seen it.

< Message edited by shaman -- 12/2/2008 12:03:53 PM >


_____________________________

Genesis 9:2-4 Ministries of SW Bracken County, KY
Confessions of a Cervid Serial Killer

(in reply to schlupis)
Post #: 17
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 2:26:21 PM   
dmcianfa


Posts: 497
Joined: 9/23/2008
From: Upriver
Status: offline
I don't think your "honking" folks off.  Most certainly not me.  It's just that I don't think your posts are getting read thoroughly when you relay so much information back.  I find myself drifting when reading your posts and subsequently just checking the next one down out before I get done reading yours.  I know you have a lot of insightful stuff to get off your chest on the topics and I agree there are some good topics on this forum, but if you truly want to be heard I think short and sweet is the ticket on forums and threads these days.  If I wanted to buy a book on deer hunting I think I would buy a book and not read many, if any, posts over the internet.  However, feel free to continue posting lengthy posts, but I'm not sure the rest of us will read past the third paragraph or so.  Just some words of encouragement, not criticism, so please don't take it the wrong way.  I am most certainly not the forum police here and everyone is entitled to hashing out their thoughts as well.  I value your opinion as much as any other posting on this forum, so I'm not trying to back you into a corner or anything, trust me.  I think you have many years of experience and can contribute much to this forum, so I wouldn't want to make an enemy out of you either, as I may need some advice of my own someday and you might be just the person that could give that to me.  So thanks for responding Shaman and sorry I was so harsh in the earlier statement.  I apologize.

_____________________________

"I enjoy and become completely immersed in the challenge and the increased opportunity to become for a time a part of nature. Deer hunting is a classical exercise in freedom. It’s a return to fundamentals that I distinctly feel are basic and right"-F.B.

(in reply to shaman)
Post #: 18
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 7:56:34 PM   
ranwin33


Posts: 1936
Joined: 5/4/2008
From: Live Kansas - Hunt Missouri
Status: offline
Bow season, it is much, much longer and requires more skill. 

By the time gun season rolls around, I'm ready for the change, but also ready to go back to my bow after about a week.

Even used my bow during last part of gun season this year.

_____________________________

We shall never achieve harmony with land, any more than we shall achieve absolute justice or liberty for people. In these higher aspirations, the important thing is not to achieve but to strive.
Aldo Leopold

(in reply to buckdog)
Post #: 19
RE: bow season vs rifle season - 12/2/2008 8:06:31 PM   
Woods Walker

 

Posts: 2546
Joined: 6/19/2008
From: Northern Illinois
Status: offline
I'm a deer hunter first and foremost. The weapon I have in my hand at the time depends upon the season.
 
I hunt with both bow and gun by the same method.....on the ground while stillhunting.
 
I measure my success not by how many deer I hang on the pole (I did that when I hunted from trees all the time, which is still a GREAT way to hunt!), but by how many I can get within good shooting range of without being detected. This I do achieve regulary, but having good CLEAN shots, especially with the bow, is very difficult. That's where the gun hunt can be a bit more rewarding.
 
Bottom line.....it's ALL good!!!! 

_____________________________

>>>--------------------------------->

Hunt Hard,

Kill Swiftly,

Waste Nothing,

Offer No Apologies.....

(in reply to buckdog)
Post #: 20
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