School me on bowhunting

If it doesnt fit anywhere else but you still want to share, this is the place
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First Shirt
Posts: 4378
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 11:32 pm

Re: School me on bowhunting

Post by First Shirt »

Highspeed wrote:Brilliant. This is exactly why I asked here, clear concise answers I can trust :)

The compound I had in the UK was something like 60lbs and I found it manageable. Finding a 2nd hand bow in Spain probably won't be easy but then most things aren't easy in Spain, I'm getting quite used to that.

One final question - I won't be able to source hay or straw bales, any alternative ideas for a backstop ?
One club I shot at in Iowa used expanding foam to make an elephant target. It took quite a bit of beating at 3D shoots, and seemed to hold up pretty well. (I remember shooting at it a bunch of times!)

As far as equipment goes, I shoot a 55-60 lbs fiberglass-laminated longbow (actually, I have three, two red elm, and one black locust) and use sitka spruce, white cedar, or douglas fir for arrows. The fir is heavier, the spruce seems a little tougher (this may be a figment of my imagination, though), and the cedar is fastest (although this is relative, since I'm probably not making 200fps with my sticks). With longbows (or recurves) you want 7-10 grains of arrow weight per pound of draw weight (my douglas fir arrows weigh about 620 grains average, with broadheads on them) to absorb the energy, and keep the noise down. I've put arrows completely through 160-lb whitetails who never knew they had been hit; they just kept browsing along until they fell over.

The most important thing is absolutely scary-sharp broadheads! I really like the two-edge Magnus heads, (I get the glue-on ones, but they also make them in the screw-in persuasion) and I've taken several deer, and two hogs with the same head (on a couple of different arrows). I won't go into the intricacies of sharpening, you're a knifemaker, I assume you have that part down!

The nice thing about traditional tackle is that you can make a lot of it yourself. I buy blank shafts, nocks, points and full length feathers, and build my own arrows, as well as making Flemish-braid bowstrings. It's actually a lot like reloading, since it requires a similar attention to detail.

I just went downstairs and checked, and I do have a can of expanding foam. I'll pick up a cardboard box at work tonight, and see how it does as a target.

If you go the compound route, you're on your own! I've never owned one, and only shot The Boss's one time (to adjust her arrow rest.) No, thank you!
But there ain't many troubles that a man caint fix, with seven hundred dollars and a thirty ought six."
Lindy Cooper Wisdom
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Highspeed
Posts: 2718
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 9:44 am

Re: School me on bowhunting

Post by Highspeed »

Just got some advice back from my bowyer friend back in Blighty. He says I should get a compound and work up to a traditional bow.
All my life I been in the dog house
I guess that just where I belong
That just the way the dice roll
Do my dog house song
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Bullspit
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Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 9:48 pm

Re: School me on bowhunting

Post by Bullspit »

Highspeed wrote:Just got some advice back from my bowyer friend back in Blighty. He says I should get a compound and work up to a traditional bow.
That was my progression.
"Stand it like a man, and give some back." Al Swearengen
AggieWalt
Posts: 145
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 8:04 pm

Re: School me on bowhunting

Post by AggieWalt »

I hit a Texas Pig (~70lbs) last winter with a crossbow. Went through both lungs and out the other side and found him a day and a half later in a gully a quarter mile away. Just like hunting with a rifle it's all about where you put it, I didn't and I wasted meat, I was also elevated and didn't have to worry about an angry pig trying to cuddle with me in the blind. Just a suggestion, when you go after them try to get a little higher than they are.
Apathy rules with an iron fist so we must strike back with steel resolve.
toad
Posts: 2645
Joined: Wed Aug 20, 2008 5:00 pm

Re: School me on bowhunting

Post by toad »

As Aggiewat says:
I have friends that hunt boar and feral hogs. The best bet is a tree stand. I watched a video of a boar getting punched through with an arrow. It didn't react it just kind of stopped and looked around. It gave the archer enough time to put another arrow into him. Of course he also hunts them along game trails in the bush with a large caliber Thompson Contender single shot pistol. Can you adrenalin junky?
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