I don't eat at Burger King but looks like you do ?If you are going to take a risky shot at an animal I woysuggest you put the gun away and go to Burger King! You should not be hunting anything at all!!!!
I don't eat at Burger King but looks like you do ?If you are going to take a risky shot at an animal I woysuggest you put the gun away and go to Burger King! You should not be hunting anything at all!!!!
Our grandson and his daughter hunt that unit up by Navajo Camp.
Good unit IMO. Do you shoot at RIO ?Our grandson and his daughter hunt that unit up by Navajo Camp.
I can't shoo anymore ,I have holes in both retinas. Dr's are trying to help. It is slow going.Good unit IMO. Do you shoot at RIO ?
Proper thought and tactical solution. It makes it a much better challenge and game.Time for me to do my devils disciple act.
If I were the OP, and given my background as a stick and string hunter as well as my admitted desire to minimize the distance of my ml shots, I would focus on understanding the movements of the deer where I'm seeing them and make it a point to be in there well before first light and try to put a shot together.
I do exactly that I get there 40 minutes before first light you have to understand this particular spot it's very unique in terrain it has bedding, escape route and funnel all in one if you can't get in there any further that's why I see deer there, when you find a pocket of coues deer you have to go with the flow so to speak and take what you can get. I have actually shot a deer sleeping I can stalk very well that's my favorite way to hunt I love it. In Arizona it's a much more difficult task with all the loose rock particularly in this spot. I started this thread knowing the reactions I would probably get but it's about a black powder load and shooting at distance not how to hunt I know how to get closer if I could all you folks talking about getting close wouldn't even have got a shot at that buck let alone worry about what load you were shooting. I'll upload a few pics of my spot later on I'm headed to work for now.Time for me to do my devils disciple act.
If I were the OP, and given my background as a stick and string hunter as well as my admitted desire to minimize the distance of my ml shots, I would focus on understanding the movements of the deer where I'm seeing them and make it a point to be in there well before first light and try to put a shot together.
Explore a paper patched Pritchett. Hollow base with plenty of thump'age powe
I have a Gibbs that shoots a 540 grain paper patch not buying anymore smoke poles I have a flintlock being built then I'm done at my age I should be selling not buying although I would like to build a few more kits when I retire.Explore a paper patched Pritchett. Hollow base with plenty of thump'age power.
I live in Colorado as well. I question the .54 caliber for elk but it’s not important enough for me to put much attention on it.Before there were state fish and game departments humans were shooting and Harvesting big game with 35 pound pull and lighter wood or backed bows. Colo archery reg might be catering to youth, women and men and elderly with lower upper body strength that might not be able to handle a heavier draw weight but using a compound bow set at 35 lbs gives a speed and force advantage over self bows. Same argument over .54 cal. Round ball minimum on elk. Shot placement rather than just ball size, weight. This is in Colo. How proficient a hunter is with stalking and shooting skills is a better realistic, practical limit than across the bow poundage or caliber restrictions. But how do you test for each hunter before awarding a license? Restrictions not arbitrary but based on real results and aimed at more ethical and clean harvest. I have no objections to .54 minimum but would like to see 35 lb draw weight minimum changed to a force/ momentum figure. I hunt and harvest with self or sinew backed bows rather than compound and strictly round ball.
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