© By Othmar Vohringer
This is a column I wrote a few years ago for Whitetail Deer Passion, however the message it contains is timeless.
Last year has been very busy and I didn’t plan on bowhunting so I never took the time to head to the archery range. This year is different. We finally have moved to our new house and most of my seminar engagement dates are finalized. Time to sit back and think of the upcoming bowhunting season. With the season opening on September 1st. it is high time to head to archery range and practice.
On Saturday evening I drove the short distance to the Nicola Valley Fish and Game Club, wondering how my first bow shooting session in a year would turn out. Will I have the strength to pull that string back on the bow? Do I still know how to shoot a bow?
I stepped up to the 20-yard target set an arrow on the string, pulled back, aimed and released. Swiiiish –Thud it went. "Would you look at that!!" I heard myself saying. The arrow stuck perfectly in the center of the target. Well that is easy. I thought as I nocked the second arrow and two seconds later it joined the first arrow less than an inch from the first arrow. After five rounds I was confident that – surprisingly to me –it seemed I hadn’t lost my ability to shoot my bow. Although a faint muscle pain in my back and shoulder reminded me that I need to do a lot more bow shooting to get the muscles back into shape too.
Encouraged I moved to the 30 yard target, the maximum distance I will shot at a live animal. Again the first group of three arrows hit the target smack in the middle, but not as close as I am used to it. A three-inch group might still be acceptable for hunting but it isn’t to me. While I was pleasantly surprised to get the arrows group that close out to 30 yards after one year of not shooting I am also fully aware that I need to spend a lot more time at the archery range to get to where I can confidently take shots at a deer.
While I do not consider myself an archer – I consider myself a bowhunter not an archer - aiming for points or stacking arrows on top of each other, I still want each and every single arrow to hit exactly where I am aiming at. This type of accuracy gives me the confidence I need in the field.
It is for that same reason that I do all my shooting under a variety of simulated hunting conditions that I may encounter. For the same reason I always shoot wearing my normal hunting garments, plus binoculars and game calls around the neck. My aim is to leave nothing to chance when that big buck stands under my treestand. I do not want to worry about -at that precise moment- that perhaps bulky clothing, binoculars and the position of the deer might interfere with my shooting accuracy.
In conversations with other bowhunters I have learned that the main reason for missing a deer mostly boiled down to one of these reasons:
This is a column I wrote a few years ago for Whitetail Deer Passion, however the message it contains is timeless.
Last year has been very busy and I didn’t plan on bowhunting so I never took the time to head to the archery range. This year is different. We finally have moved to our new house and most of my seminar engagement dates are finalized. Time to sit back and think of the upcoming bowhunting season. With the season opening on September 1st. it is high time to head to archery range and practice.
On Saturday evening I drove the short distance to the Nicola Valley Fish and Game Club, wondering how my first bow shooting session in a year would turn out. Will I have the strength to pull that string back on the bow? Do I still know how to shoot a bow?
I stepped up to the 20-yard target set an arrow on the string, pulled back, aimed and released. Swiiiish –Thud it went. "Would you look at that!!" I heard myself saying. The arrow stuck perfectly in the center of the target. Well that is easy. I thought as I nocked the second arrow and two seconds later it joined the first arrow less than an inch from the first arrow. After five rounds I was confident that – surprisingly to me –it seemed I hadn’t lost my ability to shoot my bow. Although a faint muscle pain in my back and shoulder reminded me that I need to do a lot more bow shooting to get the muscles back into shape too.
Encouraged I moved to the 30 yard target, the maximum distance I will shot at a live animal. Again the first group of three arrows hit the target smack in the middle, but not as close as I am used to it. A three-inch group might still be acceptable for hunting but it isn’t to me. While I was pleasantly surprised to get the arrows group that close out to 30 yards after one year of not shooting I am also fully aware that I need to spend a lot more time at the archery range to get to where I can confidently take shots at a deer.
While I do not consider myself an archer – I consider myself a bowhunter not an archer - aiming for points or stacking arrows on top of each other, I still want each and every single arrow to hit exactly where I am aiming at. This type of accuracy gives me the confidence I need in the field.
It is for that same reason that I do all my shooting under a variety of simulated hunting conditions that I may encounter. For the same reason I always shoot wearing my normal hunting garments, plus binoculars and game calls around the neck. My aim is to leave nothing to chance when that big buck stands under my treestand. I do not want to worry about -at that precise moment- that perhaps bulky clothing, binoculars and the position of the deer might interfere with my shooting accuracy.
In conversations with other bowhunters I have learned that the main reason for missing a deer mostly boiled down to one of these reasons:
- The hunter was not prepared to take the shot.
- The arrow went astray because something, mostly clothing, interfered with the bowstring.
- The hunter did not expect the situation he was presented with.
You need to practice exactly the way you hunt, or you at least have to get as close to it as possible. What gets practiced gets repeated.
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