Do you take a practice Shot in the stand?
#41
RE: Do you take a practice Shot in the stand?
I come a whole lot closer to be prepared for them by taking a shot. On more than one occaision I have either slapped the arm of a rain coat or bumped a limb in the stand on the shot that saved me from making that same mistake on a deer.
I guess that great for your area of the country but in my arean (and all the other areas that I travel to) when the bucks are rutting and chasing does around you, you don't ever know where they are going to end up. I am glad that all of your deer cooperate so well.....no offense RTA but did you even think about that before you typed it?...........rotflmao
That's exactly right and that is exactly what I do. I just take it one step further than you do
Experienced is spelled with and "I" and fence is spelled with and "E", but I digress. No actually I spend most of my time hunting public ground.
We diffinitely do. I agree the whitetails nose is it's best weapon but I still think it's highly overrated.
I set my sets and hunt my sets to avoid the whitetails nose, but I have lost a great deal of respect for their sense of smell over the last few years. You can call me full of crap all you want but at the end of the day my record
my record speaks for itself. I am 30 years old and I have been bowhunting 16 years and I have killed 12 bucks that will score 120 or above in an area that isn't known for big deer.
Well I will tell you what I won't do and that is make a bad shot on an animal when my equipment has been knocked off
Let me ask you guys a question. What would you do if you got out there and didn't find out your equipment was off?
#42
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Memphis TN USA
Posts: 3,445
RE: Do you take a practice Shot in the stand?
This why I say! Practicing before you hunt! like you hunt. Will tell you if your going to hit your stand with you bow are not?As far as the raincoat is concerned? If I was worried about hitting my sleeve at all I would you an arm band? Silent Ijust don`t want to find out these things after I am up a tree and hunting. I don`t want worry about any of that.
Yes silent I did! Thats why I say By practing like you hunt up a tree in the stand? shooting at 3-D targets? and by moving these targets all around in every position that can be thought of and at unknown distances is in fact preparing you for most of the shots that you will be faced with.All shots no! Most shots Yes!
I don`t think you take anything one step futher than I do? Maby a different method than I to equal the sam results? I just do it before I get in the stand and you do it after your in the stand.
I do not believe it is overrated at all. They depend on there nose for survival
We all try to set our stands to avoid the whitetails nose.But losing respect for there nose might prove to be a big mistake? It may be thebiggest buck of you life?
But no matter where you hunt for whitetails? Saying that you have lost respct for there nose just don`t seem to make common for any bowhunter to say to me.(imo)Regardless of any record.
By practicing before the hunt or taking a shot before you enter the woods would insure you of this?
Personally I would not be worred about it!If I thought maby I snagged something going in or dropped my bow and bent something I most likely would not hunt and risk screwing up my hunting area untill I checked my equipment
#43
RE: Do you take a practice Shot in the stand?
I personally don't take a pratice shot, infact I do most of my praticing on the ground. I will take a few from a stand before the season but that's it. Now as far as a pratice arrow goes? Go for it. It won'tmake one bit of difference to the deer you are hunting.
Scent on the arrow? give me a break. You mean to tell me that none of you have ever had a deer walk right under you and never smell you? Yes they have a great sense of smell but lets not get carried away here. Sometimes they can be down right stupid. I had a doe under my stand last gun season that just would not go away. That standis a built platform and is only 12 feet off of the ground! She was eating right under me and I could hear her chewing!I highly doubt an arrow stuck in the ground or a stump will break the deal. Do you guys have any idea how much scent you leave on the gound, the branches you touch on the way to your stand and how much you leave on the tree, steps etc.. in the actual act of climbing into it? So if you shoot at a deer and miss, your hunt is all over because there is an arrow out there with your scent on it?
I think sometimes people get carried away trying to appear to be super hunters and they slowlyslip past into the extreme and don't realize it. Hey nobody here needs to impress anyone, just do your thing. If you want to shoot a pratice arrow do it. It just may let you know that something is not right with your set up. If you don't then you don't. It doesn't make you a better or worse hunter just a different hunter. I don't because I will probably miss what I'm aiming at and send myself into the "think tank"for the rest of the day.
Scent on the arrow? give me a break. You mean to tell me that none of you have ever had a deer walk right under you and never smell you? Yes they have a great sense of smell but lets not get carried away here. Sometimes they can be down right stupid. I had a doe under my stand last gun season that just would not go away. That standis a built platform and is only 12 feet off of the ground! She was eating right under me and I could hear her chewing!I highly doubt an arrow stuck in the ground or a stump will break the deal. Do you guys have any idea how much scent you leave on the gound, the branches you touch on the way to your stand and how much you leave on the tree, steps etc.. in the actual act of climbing into it? So if you shoot at a deer and miss, your hunt is all over because there is an arrow out there with your scent on it?
I think sometimes people get carried away trying to appear to be super hunters and they slowlyslip past into the extreme and don't realize it. Hey nobody here needs to impress anyone, just do your thing. If you want to shoot a pratice arrow do it. It just may let you know that something is not right with your set up. If you don't then you don't. It doesn't make you a better or worse hunter just a different hunter. I don't because I will probably miss what I'm aiming at and send myself into the "think tank"for the rest of the day.
#44
RE: Do you take a practice Shot in the stand?
That's funny because I never know what tree I am going to be hunting out of nor do I know what limbs are going to be where etc when I am shooting 3D.
Well it didn't work for 150,000 of them last year in Arkansas alone
I am sure that we all get winded occaisionally and I am equally sure that there is nothing that you can doto keep from being winded 100% of the time. I am also 100% positive that you have to be hunting to be able to kill deer and sometimes you are better off hunting a stand with a less than perfect wind than you are not hunting itat all.
So practicing before the shot and entering the woods you can be sure that nothing came loose and that nothing was bumped loose and that your peep didn't slide etc. before it actually happens.............WOW you must be psychic
. If you don't then you don't. It doesn't make you a better or worse hunter just a different hunter.
#45
RE: Do you take a practice Shot in the stand?
I believe this convertion is going no where!(imo) I think there really is no wrong or right here only matter of opion? So for the recard if I have shown anyone here any disrespector anyone`s criditability Silent I apologize for doing so..rta47
#47
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: st.louis mo
Posts: 161
RE: Do you take a practice Shot in the stand?
I just draw it back once in a wile .With my luck i would spoke a deer if i tryed shooting it when hunting .i do pratice with it before season weekly or more if i can and when the season has started even more
#50
Dominant Buck
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Blossvale, New York
Posts: 21,199
RE: Do you take a practice Shot in the stand?
Every time a deer comes by.[8D]
NOPE.... I do pull and let down occasionally when it's cold to keep the muscles from freezing up.[&:] I also do isometrics etc to keep from locking up. If it's real cold I may pull back and let down every 45 minutes or so, maybe more.
NOPE.... I do pull and let down occasionally when it's cold to keep the muscles from freezing up.[&:] I also do isometrics etc to keep from locking up. If it's real cold I may pull back and let down every 45 minutes or so, maybe more.