Classifieds & Organizations > Washington State Bowhunters
draw weight for deer
mburrows:
What others have said, anything 40lbs+ that you can shoot accurately.
Go to a pro shop and have them help you out and cut down your equipment learning curve big time. You can also get some good help at the big box stores but they can be hit and miss depending on who's helping you. XXX Archery is pretty close to you if you live in Yacolt, I would go pay Cory a visit if I was you.
Dtray332:
Don't forget about good technique for drawing the bow. If you use your entire upper body, rotating your shoulders as well as arms to draw your bow, you will find that you will get a smooth draw while keeping your sights on the target area. You will also be able to handle more draw weigh as well. I've worked with a few new archers that when I watched them draw, they were just trying to muscle it with just their arms. Bows were aimed up in the air, shaking and struggling to pull it back. When you can keep your sights on your target and get a nice controlled smooth draw, there is a lot less movement on your part. Less chance of your deer or elk seeing you as well.
h20hunter:
Easy to answer , harder to do. Draw as heavy as you can accurately practice then execute in the field with accuracy.
300rum:
Couple of things....
Bow hunting is about how close you can get, not how far you can shoot.
You should be able to draw your bow straight back without "porpoising" when it is blowing wet snow sideways, you are hungry, your muscles are stiff, tired, wet, you have a heavy coat on and you have been kneeling/crawling in the muck for 30 minutes trying to get a broadside shot.
I have never seen a guy be able to pull a 70lb bow back without "porpoising" in these conditions. In the summer time after warming up, yeah, but that's not when I hunt.
A hair over 60 has been my limit, even in my 20's.
bradslam:
--- Quote from: brew on January 08, 2019, 06:17:17 PM ---I'd be more concerned with accuracy rather than draw weight. You need to practice shooting at the smallest target possible. We shoot at golf tees. Aim small, miss small. Yes 40 lbs is the smallest legal draw weight but you should be able to pull more than that. hell with those that talk about hitting a pie plate...if you can't consistantly hit playing cards at a certain distance you shouldn't be shooting game at that distance. Deer ribs are fragile and any modern broadhead will penetrate them with an accurate shot. Don't listen to those that say draw weight will compensate for a poor shot. Accuracy is the key. No matter the draw weight if you don't think you can make a clean shot then don't take it. Bad shots will happen but confidence in your shot before it is made will end up in many more filled tags than just taking the attitude of "aim high and let 'er fly"
--- End quote ---
:yeah:
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