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More then likely the 10% that opposed it are all the traditional archers. They always oppose anything to do with archery hunting that is new.
I don't really care about the lighted nock issue, but I definitely agree that adding more and more technology to a bow setup makes it less and less truly archery hunting, in my opinion. By the time you have a compound bow, with significant let-off, with sights, giant stabilizer, a mechanical release, etc in my opinion you're not really bow hunting. There's nothing wrong with it, but it's not really bow hunting. I think many non-hunters feel the same way. Again, nothing wrong with hunting this way, but if you choose to hunt with a bow, it just seems odd to me to strive constantly to make it more and more about technology and less and less about skill.
Quote from: npaull on December 10, 2011, 06:45:18 AMI don't really care about the lighted nock issue, but I definitely agree that adding more and more technology to a bow setup makes it less and less truly archery hunting, in my opinion. By the time you have a compound bow, with significant let-off, with sights, giant stabilizer, a mechanical release, etc in my opinion you're not really bow hunting. There's nothing wrong with it, but it's not really bow hunting. I think many non-hunters feel the same way. Again, nothing wrong with hunting this way, but if you choose to hunt with a bow, it just seems odd to me to strive constantly to make it more and more about technology and less and less about skill. So if you use a scope on a gun is that not really gun hunting?
Essentially I see no need for them, thus if folks are likely to use them as a crutch, then even more game will be injured and lost as people will take shots later in the day and at further distance. Thats what this bowhunter is thinking. Shoot em in daylight and within range and you should be able to see where that arrow hits. Just a thought