Part of the joy that led me to hunt
with a simple longbow was the simplicity. Knowing I was not relying on a
crutch (technology) and was more intimate with the process of my
hunting. I still clearly remember the excitement of my first miss with
the longbow, and I have not hunted with the wheels since.
Even so, I was slow to release myself from the other gear I thought
essential to being successful. I was decked out in head to toe camo,
struggled with a face mask or messy paint, covered my fletching, wore
gloves in July, had the latest high tech calls, gear, arrows, and
carried around a backpack full of support stuff. Not that all that is
terribly wrong… but I was missing even more joy.
I began to study some of the bowhunting greats and marveled at their
lack of “technology”, yet having success despite the scarcity of game
animals compared to today. Simple plaids, brightly colored arrows and
bows, sitting by the campfire and smoking! Yet, they still connected.
I began to shed the gear and with it my joy increased…..hunting became
easier. I noticed the camo did not matter. If I wore wool and soft
colors I was still hidden if I did not move. I did not need four different
kinds of knives to field dress a deer.
My gear began to simplify as well. I started using a one-piece longbow
with no bow quiver. I saw that my fletching, although bright, still did
not scare game unless I moved it while they were looking. My aluminum and carbon arrows became
wood.
At the same time, I began to curse my climber and safety harness as it
did not allow me to hunt my way, was constricting, and adjusting to a new
location quickly and quietly was difficult. I began to hunt from the ground more and I
noticed I started to have more encounters with game. Granted my shots
from the stand were a little easier because I could move more, but I
started to get more shots from the ground. As I did it more I got
better at sneaking and my chances improved. The other benefit was WOW! A blown stalk from the ground was exhilarating! In the past, I
would never consider it possible to try a sneak up on two bedded
whitetails, but once I started to try it, I realized sometimes it works!
And I got better at it. Still learning.
Instead of hanging stands and sweating my butt off in the summer, or
lugging a heavy climber up to the top of the mountain every morning in a
lather. I just spent time on the ground and began to enjoy it.
There is a freedom of just quietly sneaking into an area and sitting stealthily without the great disturbance.
Sure I still hunt from a stand from time to time, but lately the areas I
had the stands are just as good from the ground. Now I can slip in
and out as the wind changes or as I feel. FREEDOM!
I began to spend more quality time in the woods also. Instead of
extensive preparations I could just slip on a back quiver and plaid
shirt-jack and head into the woods after work. I was now hunting with a new all-white glassed longbow. Bright white
shafts fully painted, bright orange fletching, and no camo and I began to
enjoy the hunts even more.
I started to struggle hard with my old friend target panic but I had so many opportunities from the ground. I was able to slip within 25 yards of one of the biggest bucks in my area after an 85 yard stalk sliding on my butt at times. All the while his girlfriend was watching also, yet I still slipped in on them. I missed the shot but man! I also had a few encounters with a really wide 8-point my friend was able to shoot later in the season with the shotgun. His luck finally ran out.
One particular cool October morning this last season, I rolled out of
bed and went downstairs to grab my quiver and bow from the basement.
Pulled on my bean boots as the coffee perked. Ate some toaster waffle
for breakfast and stuffed a breakfast bar into my pocket. I was in no
real hurry.
I pulled into the parking area of my hunting spot and continued to sip
on my travel mug as I listened to the talk radio a bit, shaking my head at
some of the latest political blah blah idiocy. Stretching, I exited
my truck as the sunrise began to brighten up the landscape. I snatched my
back quiver, strung the longbow with a simple push-pull, and set out. I
was casually strolling across a meadow to the field edge I just decided
to hunt based on the wind and my whims that morning. I knew of a spot
there that was a bit of a hollowed out vine choked hedge, overlooking a large white oak with a deer runway under it.
I slunk into the wood line quietly through a small path I had snipped
with my pruners on another walk earlier in the season when I found this
little hidey hole with such great back cover. The nut hatches and
chickadees were noisily about their business all around me when a doe
nosed into the clearing slowly browsing. As her head was down, I rose
from my seat and positioned myself. She briefly looked up with a quick
head jerk, straight at me. I knew if I didn’t move she would not see
me, and she didn’t.
It was all a genetically engineered ruse to get me to move and I didn’t
bite. Head back down she took a step forward with her near leg and I
began my draw. The arrow struck her high and back.
Terrible shot. I sat back down and kept still for about an hour and ½
before heading in her direction. Mad at myself for the shot.
Luckily she lay there in the open about 30 yards away after no blood trail at
all. The large Ace Super Express severed an artery near her straps and
she bled out quickly.
I was mad at myself for the bad shooting but resolved to improve that, and since I have switching to left hand shooting.
Now
when I look back on that day I realize how enjoyable it all was. How
easy. How free and unencumbered my hunting has become. I see the
traditional ranks swelling with newbies lately. It is great. Still I
must ask myself do they know there is another way to hunt without
looking like a gear pimp. The older guys are growing older and
sometimes I wonder if they even know it is possible to kill a whitetail
without all that gear?
Yes, I know my way is not for everybody. I understand I am at a
different place than most. But I still think it is useful to see that
there is another way. To see you can be successful without the
crutches.
To understand that it can be cool to simplify. The gear manufacturer’s
may not like it much, but man, I get some satisfaction from doing things
on my terms.
I just found your blog. Love reading the articles. Thanks for turning me to Nate Steen for a quiver. What a way to hunt!
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