Hi guys
i just thinking, whether it is possible that two bowhunters moving parallel to a distance of 50 yards(example) and hunt .
is it somebody try that ? :campfire:
We have used a similar style when hog hunting.
The only difference is that one person moves ahead about 15-20 yards, and stops then the other person does the same. It is kind of leap frogging.
It works well with the heavy underbrush in the swamps.
You just need to keep within eye sight of each other.
I am really thinking about working on a similar technique for hunting moose and elk...depending on the situation and the wind one person could be the caller and the other the shooter or vice versa...the more the two of us hunt together the better we would get at knowing what would work at a given time...we would use the current technology of text messaging to keep in touch
DDave
If you can find a copy of "Trailing a Bear" by Bob Munger and can afford it you will read that he and Fred Bear used this technique all the time hunting moose. You'll need to work out hand signals though.
It's a great way to still hunt......just pay attention to the wind at all times and go SLOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOW.
I do it with my brother...would not do it with most other guys I know. IMO the best way to rabbit hunt other than using dogs, also effective for deer if you know the terrain well.
My hunting partner and I sometimes do that for elk out west, usually 100 - 200 yards between us depending on vegetation. We call it still hunting though. The stalk doesn't start until after one of us sees an animal.
I do it all the time for mule deer. My hunting buddy and I use a decoy once we get within 100 yards. It's been working great!
One technique that is very interesting that I don't think gets used enough is two people hunting very close together.
It is hard to quietly walk up on most animals All of us that spend anytime in the woods can pick out the animal making the noise before we see them most of the time. A two legged turkey sounds lots different than a four legged deer for example. I think two people could very effectively walk more like a deer than a two legged human with little practice and a bit of thought.
As an example one year elk hunting, my buddy and I walked out at night side by side and we walked right up on one bugling elk that we could barely see. We thought it exciting and fun and kept walking. Five minutes later, still walking out, another elk ran right up on us, thinking we were - that elk. All it could hear was us steadily walking on a grave bar.
We do it all the time during our pig hunts to Georgia. Often times both hunters get shots. The more you hunt together the better to anticipate what each other is doing. It can't be about you getting a shot rather the team getting a shot.
My dad and I frequently use this technique for squirrels.