I'm sure this has been covered but I couldn't find it, and I'm sure this stuff is common since to most folks but.I guess stumps aren't hard on your arrows.Comming from years of shooting carbon and aluminum before that I tried to avoid shooting into anything besides a target or an animal.
i think the goal isnt to find like fresh hard stumps but partially rotted ones or mostly just random things at unmarked distances that catch your eye
^^^ What he said.
Softer the stump the better.
You'll notice many people shooting carbon who foot the last few inches of the arrow with aluminum to make them a bit more robust. Some even foot the nock end. If shooting into hard stumps, or hitting rocks nocks tend to pop off and arrows split or bend at the ends.
Dan
Stump shooting is just the name. Shoot what ever. Just pick the target on whether you can find you arrow and wheter it will break. Most importantly have fun.
Definitely stumps are hard on your arrows! I do not shoot them. That's just the term to indicate "Roving" through the woods practicing at whatever target strikes you; pine cones, bushes, beer cans, etc at various & inconsistent distances.
Cow pies are the best!!!
QuoteOriginally posted by SS Snuffer:
Cow pies are the best!!!
Properly aged ones of course!
"Never kick a fresh turd on a hot day."
- Harry S. Truman
I don't shoot them either! :archer:
Yeah we shoot old rotted stumps, sticks, leaves or clumps of grass that stick out of the norm. Something you can tell you hit it.
What Buddy Bell said, stumping is a generalized term for shooting stuff while walking around. I was out "stumping" yesterday with a buddy along the bottom lands or the Wisconsin River. We shot: spots of snow, rotted stumps, sticks, leaves, weed stalks, shadow spots, etc. It is a great way to practice and is as fun as you make it. Roving perhaps does explain the activity better than the term "stump shooting".
Bob.
QuoteOriginally posted by SS Snuffer:
Cow pies are the best!!!
Me and my brother used to use them for aerials when they got dry enough.
I kind of like shooting at leaves.
I've gotten really good at it too.
Every time I shoot, I get one....lol
Dehydrated cow pies make excellent stumps.
God bless,Mudd
Anything your heart desires....cow pies, horse apples, wild flowers [dandelions are my favorite], a leaf on a patch of moss. Anything that gives you the opportunity to pick a spot. And the most important thing is is to go often and have fun!!
Since I shoot thin walled 2212 aluminum arrows, I'm very careful what I shoot it when I'm roving.
Large leaves, pines cones and dirt bank anomalies are my favorite targets.
That's a good one 30coupe! :laughing: I like "Mudd's" idea of shooting at leaves - every time I shoot, I get one! That sounds like what I do also!
I always shoot wood arrows for "stumpin'", just in case my target is harder than what I thought. Stump shooting (roving) is a great way to practice for hunting.
Bernie Bjorklund
NC Iowa/SW Wisconsin
I stump shoot alot, and I used to go through tons of arrows. I switched to easton fmj,s with a 1.25" footing with a 2216 and in a year of shooting I have never drove a single point in or damaged any arrow on the end. I did bend 2 in that year but that is it. I bet I have bent a dozen judos over at a 45deg. angle though. Give it a try, i bet you will be impressed.
Another vote for footing the end with aluminum. I haven't had one mushroom out since adding the footing.
(http://i1220.photobucket.com/albums/dd444/mbhensley/Archery%20Stuff/Thunderstick%20Bows/Mag_55/b3933692.jpg)
Thanks for the info fellers.It looks like to much fun to not do.Just wanted to make sure I wasn't missing something.
Might want to stay away from cedar stumps...cause them cedar stumps are mighty hard! :D
Jason
Frozen stumps can be pretty hard on arrows. I have been having pretty good luck with 3555s footed with about 2-1/2" of 2117 aluminum shaft. Of course I miss a lot so I have to worry more about finding my arrows after shooting :biglaugh:
Footing carbons is a must. Hardwoods take a long time to soften up. But the woods are full of thousands of softer targets.
Yea Maineac like snow banks lol.
Thanks for all the help.I'm going to be using wood shafts.So I'll just be careful what I shoot at and take lots of arrahs.
Hello, my name is Dave, and I shoot stumps, real stumps, you know, the kind that used to be a tree.
Shooting stumps that aren't stumps is for sissys! Man up and have at it!
I make stump arrows the same way Fred Anderson said in The Traditional Way............"cheap and lots of 'em". I use bargain wood shafts, fletch with drops from the chopper, blunts are .38 casings, and seal the shaft with bowstring wax buffed in with a rag. My record is 142 arrows lost or destroyed in one year.
I shoot for fun and if I have to worry about breakage then I ain't having fun. Happiness is an empty quiver at the end of the day! :)
Sure, stumps can be tough. Shoot the old mossy ones.
Douglas fir holds up better than cedar for a shaft material.
If you stump shoot in Jersey you will have more trash to shoot at then stumps. Just check with fish and game to be sure what stumps are in season...LOL
I can't wait for this bow to get here.I lost interest in shooting and hadn't shot my compound in over two years.Now I'm getting excited about it again.
We all call it stumpshooting....it's more Roving around and picking out targets in the woods or fields at unknown distances and shoot at them.
It's the only form I practice I use. Roam the hardwoods and pick out stumps, small limbs, clumps of leaves...shoot uphill, down hill, kneeling etc..
Smaller the target...forces concentration. Longer shots, make you concentrate even harder.
Use Judos, Tiger claws, homemade points that won't bury in soft dirt or leaves. Here in NY, a great time to combine squirrel hunting and roving. Plenty of action and plenty of shooting.
hey joe i see you aint to far away from me in kingston sometime next squirrel season we should try to get together for a stump
I like to shoot at small sticks, and hedge balls, but hedge balls leave a sticky residue on the shafs, so don't use them as my primary targets.
@ Mudd; Mudd, you shoot those leaves on the wing or ground sluce 'em?
One thing I go also is shoot at a target close to the ground usually or at something with a up slope behind. Judos are a must.
Stump Huntin is almost as fun as real huntin. The big plus for stumpin is that you can always find something to shoot at.
Small stumps...
(http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x94/vlcnrydr/shared%20photos/DSCF1332.jpg)
Medium stumps...
(http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x94/vlcnrydr/shared%20photos/DSCF1337.jpg)
Even big Ol' stumps...
(http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x94/vlcnrydr/shared%20photos/DSCF1338.jpg)
Sometimes a branch will jump out to save a stump...
(http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x94/vlcnrydr/shared%20photos/DSCF1340.jpg)
Plus there's things to see. Like these ledges...
(http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x94/vlcnrydr/shared%20photos/DSCF1341.jpg)
(http://i180.photobucket.com/albums/x94/vlcnrydr/shared%20photos/DSCF1344.jpg)
Grab some arrows and get out there. Prepare to become addicted...