Free: Contests & Raffles.
Buckmark thanks for your 2 cents, I am definitely working on becoming a better hunter and I do still have a ways to go, the problem I'm having though is that i don't have enough days to hunt with rifle. I am not under the impression archery is easier i just think i would have a better chance with more days to hunt, do you think this thinking is mislead?
Bare minimum, two sticks and a string . Get ya a long bow and go kill one. I'm chasing that one myself. Good Luck in what ever you decide.
Quote from: Squidward on May 10, 2017, 02:46:19 PMBare minimum, two sticks and a string . Get ya a long bow and go kill one. I'm chasing that one myself. Good Luck in what ever you decide.This is why I went from compound to traditional. so many less factors and so much more fun. less about the bow more about the indian.
Bobdog99 I first want to say that there is nothing wrong with looking at options to get you in the woods more. I was in the exact same boat, I hated having very little time for firearm season and archery season really helped. Bowhunting has made 10X the gun hunter I was, when your forced to get close it makes you look at the woods different.Now to your question,"what is the bare minimum I would need to go out and have a good chance at a deer or elk during archery?" Well you need a bow, arrows, quiver, sight, rest, target, a release and a stabilizer(generally speaking). Buying all this new would cost you at least $900-$1200. BUT lucky for you there is a much easier and cheaper option......buying used. Bows don't keep their value well which means you can get a great bow for less then $400 that might have cost $800 just 3-4 years ago. Often times you can buy complete set ups cutting your cost way down and if you know people that are into bow hunting you can even get some of this stuff for free(or cheap)! the hard part is knowing what to look for. A bow I always recommend is a PSE Stinger3g I bought mine all set up for $250(only been shot 4 times) and that was legit EVERYTHING. Has a ton of adjustability to it and is a great bow to learn on. The big thing your going to run into is learning to tune your bow.....it is a lot harder then most think. Tuning and becoming proficient with a bow takes a good amount of time. Make sure you're willing to put in the time and really want to take on the struggles of being a bowhunter. If not (which is totally fine every schedule is different) i would suggest maybe black powder instead as it would might be cheaper and easier for you to learn.You asked for major drawbacks:1. Lots of moving parts to tune. Rest, arrows, sight, cams, broadhead tuning even your release all have to be adjusted and tuned to you. If one of these things is off your shooting will suffer horribly. it can be incredibly frustrating when you are first starting out.2. losing arrows....HUGE DRAWBACK. I know bullets can be expensive but not even close to losing arrows. My arrows with run about $15-17 buck PER and add in broadheads and missing can become costly. Lighted nocks really helped me find arrows but again add cost.3.WIND, I know wind effects bullets but boy does it really mess with arrows. I will hunt bad weather all the time but if there is a really strong wind you have to either find valleys with less or limit your distance even more.4. Finding a moment to draw, it can be very difficult and even if you do get to full draw holding it waiting for an animal to take a few steps can be rough.5. The Biggest drawback BY FAR is that you will be completely addicted to it because it is insanely fun and challenging If you have any questions or want to chat more about it PM me. I also have some bow stuff I would be happy to give you for next to nothing. Hope that helps and shoot straight!