Would you shoot farther than normal IF….
#21
RE: Would you shoot farther than normal IF….
After seeing the initial responses, I think the way one determines their “normal max range” has an impact on the answer.
I am more than capable of hitting the vitals of a deer at ranges a good bit farther than what I choose to shoot at. My shooting ability only plays a small role in this decision, along with tracking conditions, hunting conditions (thick woods, lots of twigs), general philosophy on bowhunting, and the possibility of the deer moving. I like to keep things as close to “guaranteed” as I can when it comes to bowhunting, so I limit myself to ranges well under what I have pins for. Given the scenario I proposed, with a known distance, yes I would shoot out to what I had pins for, because 1, I’m confident in my shooting ability, and 2, those conditions make for MUCH easier tracking should the shot not turn out ideal. If the shot is fatal, I will find the deer.
I am more than capable of hitting the vitals of a deer at ranges a good bit farther than what I choose to shoot at. My shooting ability only plays a small role in this decision, along with tracking conditions, hunting conditions (thick woods, lots of twigs), general philosophy on bowhunting, and the possibility of the deer moving. I like to keep things as close to “guaranteed” as I can when it comes to bowhunting, so I limit myself to ranges well under what I have pins for. Given the scenario I proposed, with a known distance, yes I would shoot out to what I had pins for, because 1, I’m confident in my shooting ability, and 2, those conditions make for MUCH easier tracking should the shot not turn out ideal. If the shot is fatal, I will find the deer.
#22
Dominant Buck
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: land of the Lilliputians, In the state of insanity
Posts: 26,274
RE: Would you shoot farther than normal IF….
If I can see it, ill sling an arrow at it. My furthest shot has been over 200 yards.
Wait, that was while shooting clout.
Wait, that was while shooting clout.
#23
RE: Would you shoot farther than normal IF….
No, if I can't normally take the shot it is outside of my effective range regardless of conditions. That said, I will reduce my range if conditions aren't optimal (e.g. rain, jumpy animal, etc.) but my effective range is my effective range. It don't get any better with outside conditions.
#24
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Memphis TN USA
Posts: 3,445
RE: Would you shoot farther than normal IF….
I guess the underlying premise for me is that I don't have a set in stone effective range. It is dictated on a day by day and a case by case basis. If I am hunting and area that is real thick, or the deer is nervous,or it's real windyetc. etc. my "max effective range" for that day may be 25 or 30 yards. On a calm day with good tracking conditionsand a calm animal in the wide openmy "max effective range" may be 50 yards.
#25
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 3,913
RE: Would you shoot farther than normal IF….
I've been guilty of shooting farther than I was comfortable with before. Both times ended with a clean kill, but I think lady luck was on my side on those occasions. I have a set limit that I stick to now. 30 is the absolute max I will shoot, regardless of animal size, conditions, etc.
#26
RE: Would you shoot farther than normal IF….
ORIGINAL: rybohunter
After seeing the initial responses, I think the way one determines their “normal max range” has an impact on the answer.
I am more than capable of hitting the vitals of a deer at ranges a good bit farther than what I choose to shoot at. My shooting ability only plays a small role in this decision, along with tracking conditions, hunting conditions (thick woods, lots of twigs), general philosophy on bowhunting, and the possibility of the deer moving. I like to keep things as close to “guaranteed” as I can when it comes to bowhunting, so I limit myself to ranges well under what I have pins for. Given the scenario I proposed, with a known distance, yes I would shoot out to what I had pins for, because 1, I’m confident in my shooting ability, and 2, those conditions make for MUCH easier tracking should the shot not turn out ideal. If the shot is fatal, I will find the deer.
After seeing the initial responses, I think the way one determines their “normal max range” has an impact on the answer.
I am more than capable of hitting the vitals of a deer at ranges a good bit farther than what I choose to shoot at. My shooting ability only plays a small role in this decision, along with tracking conditions, hunting conditions (thick woods, lots of twigs), general philosophy on bowhunting, and the possibility of the deer moving. I like to keep things as close to “guaranteed” as I can when it comes to bowhunting, so I limit myself to ranges well under what I have pins for. Given the scenario I proposed, with a known distance, yes I would shoot out to what I had pins for, because 1, I’m confident in my shooting ability, and 2, those conditions make for MUCH easier tracking should the shot not turn out ideal. If the shot is fatal, I will find the deer.
Its like Matt said, just dont do something stupid.
#29
RE: Would you shoot farther than normal IF….
As some of the guys have already posted, my max range depends on many variables. The weather, the deer, the surroundings, the location, etc. If you asked me to give a number, I would say 30 because that is average. But under the right circumstances I would shoot out to 35. Under the wrong circumstances I won't shoot past 20.
This weekend I had a doe come in who knew there was something wrong. As I was looking for a shot, I told myself no more than 20 and aim at the bottom half because she will most likely duck. A few minutes later I had her standing broadside at 30 (my numerical max effective range), but didn't even pick up the bow because I knew she was too anxious and the chance of wounding was too great. On the flip side, I had a dead calm deer (BB) come into my setup and browse at 35 yds a few years ago. I felt confident in all present variables and executed the perfect shot. He was down in seconds.
So given the conditions above, I'm not ruling out the option of taking a bit longer shot than my numerical answer of 30....it just depends on the variables. As a sidenote I will never shoot farther than the pins on my site (currently out to 40).
This weekend I had a doe come in who knew there was something wrong. As I was looking for a shot, I told myself no more than 20 and aim at the bottom half because she will most likely duck. A few minutes later I had her standing broadside at 30 (my numerical max effective range), but didn't even pick up the bow because I knew she was too anxious and the chance of wounding was too great. On the flip side, I had a dead calm deer (BB) come into my setup and browse at 35 yds a few years ago. I felt confident in all present variables and executed the perfect shot. He was down in seconds.
So given the conditions above, I'm not ruling out the option of taking a bit longer shot than my numerical answer of 30....it just depends on the variables. As a sidenote I will never shoot farther than the pins on my site (currently out to 40).