Jump to content

Arrow speed VS Arrow momentum


josephmrtn
 Share

Recommended Posts

Nope, they never came into the talk. As I said, his comments were directed toward target shooting at long range to make the shorter shots easier. You can DVR it, Im sure they will replay it 8 gajillion times lol.

Well, wait a minute ..... That theory of practicing at longer distances than you would shoot while hunting is something I completely agree with. I do that all the time. I always spend at least some time practicing out to 50 yards even though I don't take any hunting shots beyond 30 yards. It is a confidence thing. I may have misunderstood what you said the guy was saying. I thought you were saying that he was advocating longer hunting shots because of what he could do on targets.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, wait a minute ..... That theory of practicing at longer distances than you would shoot while hunting is something I completely agree with. I do that all the time. I always spend at least some time practicing out to 50 yards even though I don't take any hunting shots beyond 30 yards. It is a confidence thing. I may have misunderstood what you said the guy was saying. I thought you were saying that he was advocating longer hunting shots because of what he could do on targets.

 

Yeah you misunderstood. Perhaps I said it wrong. In any case he was advocating taking long practice shots. I found the statement that the newer bows pretty much shoot themselves as the interesting part. He also said right after that, you just need to know where to place the pin.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Technology has changed hunting but society and human expansion also changed hunting.  No longer can we chase thousands of buffalos off a cliff on horseback.  No longer can we chase buffalos on horseback and fling 30 spears onto its back and watch it die a long agonizing death nor should we.

 

Hunting is also not a competition with fellow hunters.  Hunting is testing yourself against nature.  You set your own goals.  To say you're successful can only be said when accomplishing the goals you set for yourself...not what others set for you.

 

To say that you're a better hunter than someone else because you challenge yourself with certain limitations is like saying you relax and enjoy nature better than someone else and that's just ridiculous.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Technology has changed hunting but society and human expansion also changed hunting.  No longer can we chase thousands of buffalos off a cliff on horseback.  No longer can we chase buffalos on horseback and fling 30 spears onto its back and watch it die a long agonizing death nor should we.

 

Hunting is also not a competition with fellow hunters.  Hunting is testing yourself against nature.  You set your own goals.  To say you're successful can only be said when accomplishing the goals you set for yourself...not what others set for you.

 

To say that you're a better hunter than someone else because you challenge yourself with certain limitations is like saying you relax and enjoy nature better than someone else and that's just ridiculous.

 

Well said.  I played sports my whole life. I am competitive in everything I do. Now that there aren't many sports left to play besides golf, softball, basketball, etc, I really have grown to enjoy hunting and fishing more than ever. To me, it is me vs. the species I am targeting (Lake Trout, Deer, etc.).  Waking up at 4am, sitting outside on the ground from dark - dark in my scent free clothes, hoping I have a tricked a deer into walking by me close enough to get a shot.  It's a rush and nothing like it.

 

Just like in sports, I follow the laws/rules. I never corked by bat in baseball, I never took steroids. In hunting I don't illegally bait.  However, I do take advantage of better technology. In golf, I have custom clubs that are legal. In hunting, I use top of the lines guns, scopes, xbows, etc.

Edited by Biz-R-OWorld
Link to comment
Share on other sites

For me, my life is dominated by hunting in the fall/winter and softball in the spring/summer.  Double header this Sunday...last regular season games.  We have to sweep and the 8th place team has to lose both of their games for us to make the playoffs.  A few years ago I severely sprained my ankle sliding into second on a double.  I played the entire playoffs with it bandaged with ACE bandage with tons of duck tape on top.  It looked like I was wearing an astronaut boot.  People thought I was crazy but there was no way I was sitting out.  We made it to the championship but lost.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yea man, I hear you. For years I played in the Sunday morning league in Mahopac and weeknight leagues in Kent, Patterson, and Tarrytown. 

 

I once dislocated my finger sliding into home in a playoff softball game once. Jammed it into the catchers cleat. The two bones closest to the fingernail slid on top of the bone cloest to the hand. I dont know how they didnt go through the skin. The skin was so white because it was so stretched.  At the ER they had 1 guy hold my shoulder in place while the other doctor pulled my finger out away from me and down to drop it into place. 

 

Unfortunately, due to my shoulder I no longer play softball. I played last year in Tarrytown league under the TZ bridge, but I couldnt throw and hit like I used to. I couldnt deal with being an "average joe" out there, so I probably won't ever play again.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow - this thread has taken a turn.  Probably for the better, but it can be interesting to pop back and see where the thread ends.

 

Shouldn't you be out lawyering or something? LOL.

 

I'll also say what I said earlier about finding a decent set-up goes on both ends. When you shoot 80, 90, 100lbs bows, I don't care if you attach a tree saw, an axe head, or a ninja sword to it for a BH. The deer is going to die if shot well, ha. Heck it may die twice.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Or within 500 feet of a dwelling.

 

DOn't want the antis to end up with bambi in the freezer.

Maybe in NY, but not in CT:

 

Does the 500 foot rule apply to bowhunting?

No. The safety buffer of 500 feet only applies to hunting with firearms or carrying of a loaded firearm when a reasonable person would conclude that the individual was engaged in hunting.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Or within 500 feet of a dwelling.

DOn't want the antis to end up with bambi in the freezer.

Maybe in NY, but not in CT:

Does the 500 foot rule apply to bowhunting?

No. The safety buffer of 500 feet only applies to hunting with firearms or carrying of a loaded firearm when a reasonable person would conclude that the individual was engaged in hunting.

Since a ballista is like a crossbow, I'd assume that I can launch one within 500 in CT, nice!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At what point is hunting no longer hunting with all the technology advancements. I have no range finder, no electronic wind telling device, no ear piece to help me hear game, no rifle that can shoot a million and one yards, no darn electronic anything.

 

About the most technologically advanced thing i have is a mathews bow lol

 

Now, some of you guys may be with me on this and some may not, either or is cool with me. I just hunt, i have hunted long enough to know what do to do and i dont need technology to improve my hunting skills. The only way to do that is sit in a tree and watch and learn.

 

Whose with me!! 

I'd agree w you.... except my computer has become a HUGE scouting tool... lol

 

By that analogy, you may want to look into hunting with rock.

I agree that being out there is important, but so is confidence in your hunting implement and knowing its advantages.

+1

 

The thing is that technology does NOT improve hunting skills. In fact it usually attempts to replace hunting skills. The trick is to find the stopping place for each individual where they can utilize some level of technology without being crippled by it. That is a decision that each hunter has to make for themselves. That Mathews bow that you use does actually represent one heck of a pile of modern-day technology, and I'll bet one could take a look at the rest of your set-up and spot all kinds of fairly high-tech stuff when compared to what I started out with. I also might mention that the equipment that I started out with represented some monster technological steps past the weapons of history. Consider those high-tech recurves with laminated limbs and with the modern glues and plastics, manufacturing procedures of Fred Bear's early mass produced bows along with that super-duper Dacron bowstring  and that Hoyt arrow rest with that plastic finger that was adhered to the bow with double sided tape was the latest thing on the market. I started out with the hottest bow hunting setup that made the ancient bows of the Turks look like true crap.

 

The point is that everybody has to make up their own minds as to where their comfort level is with the technology that belongs in this so-called primitive weapons season called bowseason. I understand what you are saying, and it appears to me that somewhere along the line, we have crossed some invisible line when it comes to bowhunting. But the fact is that no two people really can agree on where that line is. I am beginning to be convinced that there is no such line and never will be. Someone will always be trying to push the envelope until eventually you will not even know how to define the sport anymore.

False (it can sometimes), True (yup!), Exactly!!!

 

can we mix catapults with baiting? Just bait the deer into the catapult and launch it right into the freezer.

rofl lmao

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Unless you have superhuman eyesight, no one could have distinguished between my 8" spike and a doe. Quite embarrassing. But it did have long ears.

quote name="phade" post="222500" timestamp="1374691002"]

Depends if it's a spike or a doe.

Moog toys around with superhuman draw weights just because he can, lol.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The thing is that technology does NOT improve hunting skills. In fact it usually attempts to replace hunting skills. The trick is to find the stopping place for each individual where they can utilize some level of technology without being crippled by it.

 

False (it can sometimes), True (yup!), Exactly!!!

I think you are mistaking "purchasing success" with actually obtaining hunting skills. There may be some skill involved in using items of new technology, but that does not the same as learning hunting skills. I'll stand by my original statement unless you have some good examples.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Similar Content

    • By CrossOvertheRiverOutdoors
      Hello to all my fellow bow hunters! Here's a question for you, if you had the chance to hunt and win $50,000, would you do it? Well your chance has come! It's the Bone Collector North American Whitetail Championship! The biggest and most exciting deer hunting tournament that's ever hit the whitetail woods! Here's how it works, throughout the USA and Canada, there's 14 different regions, New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey would be considered as Region 1, the bow hunter that harvests the largest P&Y scoring buck in he or she's region will qualify for a championship hunt in the land of Giants, (KANSAS) at Wicked Outfitters for a chance to win $50,000!!  You may ask, is there an entry fee? Yes, there is a $300 entry fee, but here's the cool part, when you sign up, the crew at the championship will send you a gear package in the mail with over $400 worth of hunting gear! You will also have your name put in for hunt give away drawings and product give a ways! How cool is that!? You might be thinking to yourself, I don't have a big enough buck to hunt that i can win anything with. NOT the case, if you harvest a buck and enter it into the tournament, you will be put in for another drawing for the Kansas HUNT! How do you sign up? Simply go to www.nawtc.com fill out the entry form that's required for you to sign up, and your ready to go! When your filling out the entry form, you will see where it says referral, type in our email address [email protected] to let the guys at the championship know that your signing up through us! Watch the video below about the Bone Collector North American Whitetail Championship and enter today!  Last year I was blessed to be the region 1 winner of this great tournament, and i'm currently getting ready to head for Kansas for the championship hunt! I couldn't believe that God gave this opportunity to me! Check out the hunt that one me the region and if you want to see how the championship hunt unfolds for me, follow me on Instagram, Facebook @ Cross Over the River Outdoors! Please also Subscribe to my YouTube channel, also Cross Over the River Outdoors! Good luck to every one this fall! and as always God Bless!  
       
    • By TheMiz54
      Lease available for 2018 in Steuben County close to town of Greenwood. Looking for a max of 2 hunters (flexible if you have kids and would like them to hunt as well). 
      I would like to open this up to responsible hunters who have a passion for hunting and whitetails. I am trying to give back to the land and create new deer habitat every year. Looking for hunters that will treat the place like their own and enjoy the time out in the woods. Lots of wildlife (Bear, Deer, Turkey, Grouse, Fox, Coyote, etc.)
      21 Acres
      Walking distance to State Land (Rock Creek State Forest) and short ride to Turkey Ridge SF, and Greenwood SF where you can enjoy several thousand acres of hunting land.
      Several treestands on the property.
      Fall foodplots will be going in around July/August 2018 (3 Acres)
      Apple, Pear, Chestnut Tree Plots established and producing fruit as of 2017
      If you are interested and would like more information please let me know. 

       
       
    • By Hookhunter20
      Just wanted to post a video of one of my successful bow hunts this year. Something about documenting your hunt and self filming adds even more of a rewarding feeling to a bow harvest when it all comes together. *Disclaimer*  I don't think I'm a "pro" nor am I trying to be just love filming and tinkering around with the editing. The audio on the video from my second doe harvest is much better than this one, I figured out a few tricks with the editing software recently and I'll have that one done by the weekend. You can skip through the talking parts if you want the shot happens around the 3:20 mark.  
       
    • By Rottiemoose
      Hey everyone. Looking to join a hunting club in light of the upcoming start of the  2017-2018 deer season. I live in Elmira and work a lot, so ideally I would like to hunt as close to where I live as possible. I almost exclusively bowhunt, but will use a rifle periodically. I just moved here from Atlanta about a year ago, so I'm still relatively new to the area and haven't found a place to hunt yet. Thank you! 
      Neil 
    • By Hookhunter20
      Hey guys,
      It's always been a dream of mine to someday run an outfit. I know it's no walk in the park to start up a bussiness, espically in a state like NY but I was wondering if anyone on here has any information and tips they wouldn't mind sharing. 
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...