I am looking to challenge myself over the next few months and try and put myself in challenging shooting scenarios. I already figured out a few as far as incline, down hill, obstacle(tree ect.) and height.
So what challenging shootig scenarios have you been in that I may try to duplicate? :coffee:
if your right handed ,shooting to your right side. thats the tuffest i think, especially when the deer is really close ,and it should be a piece of cake.
I was thinking the same thing as arrow30. I have been practicing out of my stand alot lately and for me, being a righty, shooting to the right while sitting has really been my struggle.
Try working out and getting your heart rate up and breathing hard....then try and calm yourself and shoot at a target.
To follow up on my last post. It probably won't be a scenario now that I realize it's a struggle. I know that I must show patience and wait on the best shot and not try a 50/50 shot to the right. Of coarse if I get stood up all is good again! Practice these scenario's as much as possible so you will know what to be aware of! Lets here more
How about waking up at 4:30 AM at 10,000' after not having slept very well on the ground and because of the elevation. The temp is about 20 degrees. You walk out to a spot where you hope elk might come by, and then stand there behind some bushes trying to keep your fingers from turning numb by wrapping them around handwarmers in your pockets, with your bow tucked under your arm. Then an elk does come by, when it's still a little darker than you would like, and a lot colder than you would like, and you feel totally stiff and wonder if you can get the bow back to full draw.
You mention incline (uphill) and on a standing shot I am good to go. Had a bull Caribou come in above me while I was kneeling. Pulled up and the shot just felt wrong! It not only felt wrong, it looked wrong! I couldn't take the shot. When the bull moved behind some brush I got stood up, but a shot never presented itself. I have practiced that shot since, but have never had the opportunity to take it in a hunting situation. Mike
arrow30 hit it on the nose
arrow30 :thumbsup: Missed a big doe at 9 yards by 4 feet like that!
Shooting uphill always messes with me.
shooting to the right, behind me.
I gotta agree shooting with the right foot forward if your a righty.
QuoteOriginally posted by McDave:
How about waking up at 4:30 AM at 10,000' after not having slept very well on the ground and because of the elevation. The temp is about 20 degrees. You walk out to a spot where you hope elk might come by, and then stand there behind some bushes trying to keep your fingers from turning numb by wrapping them around handwarmers in your pockets, with your bow tucked under your arm. Then an elk does come by, when it's still a little darker than you would like, and a lot colder than you would like, and you feel totally stiff and wonder if you can get the bow back to full draw.
How do you suggest we practice this one, stay up all night and then go out early morning with some ice in our pockets? :biglaugh:
:laughing: :laughing: :laughing:
For me...the worst shooting scenerio would have something to do with elk hunting. With that said....go run a mile then sprint that last quarter mile. Grab your bow and draw it back, hold for 10 seconds at full draw then swing to shoot at a slow moving target at say......10-15 yds.
Brett
QuoteOriginally posted by Ari:
quote:
Originally posted by McDave:
How about waking up at 4:30 AM at 10,000' after not having slept very well on the ground and because of the elevation. The temp is about 20 degrees. You walk out to a spot where you hope elk might come by, and then stand there behind some bushes trying to keep your fingers from turning numb by wrapping them around handwarmers in your pockets, with your bow tucked under your arm. Then an elk does come by, when it's still a little darker than you would like, and a lot colder than you would like, and you feel totally stiff and wonder if you can get the bow back to full draw.
How do you suggest we practice this one, stay up all night and then go out early morning with some ice in our pockets? :bigsmyl:
For me, when there's an animal in front of me. :rolleyes: :rolleyes:
Hanging upside-down by my harness out of a treestand...
What? It could happen!
Don't know if this is what you are after because I don't know how you can duplicate it. But in a hunting situation having an animal facing you and being aware of you is almost an impossibility. I have had that happen once successfully but I sat still for almost 1/2 hour before the deer turned broadside and gave me the shot...27 yards on the ground, snow and in the teens. Don't want to have to do that again. Then there is the "Bedded Buck" shot at the Muzzy shoot. Someone will have to post a picture to give it full value but you are shooting under a log, over a stone wall and to do the shot accurately you cannot see the target once you kneel down far enough to get the arrow thru the opening, under the log and over the stone wall.
I fight my worst case every day. Have'n target panic! Going on my first Elk hunt this fall and having it flair up when I have a shot coming into play is my worst nightmare..... :banghead: :dunno:
May consider developing different challenging shot scenarios until you reach 20. Start with the inital ones and draw the scenario from a hat. Keep developing and adding challenging yet different scenarios.
Example: Run thru ten random scenarios in one pratices session. 1st drawn scenario - Walk quickly but quietly in lowered position up hill for 200 yards, belly crawl for w/bow for ~50 yards, duck walk quitely for 35 yards. Set back against tree w/ anticipated shot ~15 yards virtually directly behind you. Remain stationary for ~10 seconds. Draw to full anchor and hold near target for ~ 7 seconds then move on target and hold for three, then release. Target to be a blank paper plate with 2nd plate underneath with an 'X'.
Just a thought. May be fun - May be hell.
Just plain ASS MISSING at 15 yards. :banghead: :banghead:
My toughest was woodland caribou on open tundra. Shooting from knees, trying to stay as flat to the scrub as possible, shooting almost horizontal.
All of the practice in the world won't put meat in the freezer. Do some stump shooting in the woods when you are hunting, and be creative. You are in Georgia now. Go kill a pig.
Oops. Looked at your post, and maybe you are back in nj. If so, my condolences.
Shooting at somthing bigger than a rabbit. When it comes to deer and stuff I lose it .
My worst shooting scenario is when I run out of arrows to shoot.. :bigsmyl: That being said I think that shooting to my right, I'm right handed.
Realizing that lump you just moved with your foot, while getting in position to draw, was the top of a fire ant bed. Or, not realizing it was a fire ant bed. :eek: