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Bowhunting

Hunting by archery

Bowhunting

Hunting by archery

Bowhunter in [[Utah

Bowhunting (or bow hunting) is the practice of hunting game animals by archery. Many indigenous peoples have employed the technique as their primary hunting method for thousands of years, and it has survived into contemporary use for sport and hunting.

Modern history

Picture of Pope taken while grizzly hunting at Yellowstone

The last of the Yahi tribe, an indigenous man known as Ishi, came out of hiding in California in 1911. His doctor, Saxton Pope, learned many of Ishi's traditional archery skills, and popularized them. The Pope and Young Club, founded in 1961 and named in honor of Pope and his friend, Arthur Young, became one of North America's leading bowhunting and conservation organizations. Founded as a nonprofit scientific organization, the club was patterned after the Boone and Crockett Club and advocated responsible bowhunting by promoting quality, fair chase hunting, and sound conservation practices. Modern game archery owes much of its success to Fred Bear, an American bow hunter and bow manufacturer.

Equipment

Arrows, bows and sights are commonly of the more modern varieties. However, all effective variations, including crossbows and wooden bows launching wooden arrows with stone points, are used. Arrowheads are chosen to ensure lethality. Broadheads feature blades that jut out from the shaft at an angle to cause more damage to the target; some models have retractable blades that only deploy once they hit the target.

Hunting [[crossbow

Big game hunting requires a draw weight of more than . For larger game such as elk or moose, more than 50 lbf is suggested. Most male American archers can draw a bow rated at 50 -, most women 30 -.

Lighter arrows, all else equal, will give a higher speed and a flatter trajectory. Arrows with greater mass carry more momentum, and penetrate better in large animals; a minimum mass of 650 gr is recommended for animals such as deer, pigs, etc. and 900 gr for the largest game.

Methods of hunting

In contrast to a rifle hunter, who may shoot effectively from ranges in excess of 200 yd; archers usually restrict shots to 2.3 to. The distance depends upon individual ability, the target animal, the bow strength, terrain, arrow and weather. The bow hunter may walk along the ground slowly, looking for game and stalking it carefully in the final approach. This type of slow, methodical stalking, is called "spot and stalk." Hunters often wear camouflage clothing and walk upwind (with the wind in their face) so that game ahead of them cannot smell them.

In "stand hunting," the hunter waits for game to come to them, usually near food, water, or known trails. Brush and other natural materials may be placed for cover, or a "ground blind" that looks like a camouflage tent may be used. They usually "pop" up and can be set up from folded in a few minutes. The hunter may wait on a wooden or metal stand elevated in a tree, from 3 to.

Bowhunting for fish is called bowfishing. Bowfishing equipment usually adds a line attached to a spool or a reel as well as a specially designed, heavier, barbed arrow. Most bow-fishers do not use sights, but if they do have sights they are different from standard ones to allow for refraction.

Opposition

Colorado Springs

Some are deeply opposed to bow hunting in particular, on the grounds of cruelty. The organization People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals states that "quick kills are rare, and many animals suffer prolonged, painful deaths when hunters severely injure but fail to kill them."

Wounding rates

A study conducted by the Oklahoma Fish and Wildlife Agencies found that approximately 50% of deer that were shot were never recovered, noting that this rate was similar to data from other studies. Some deer survived for up to 5–7 days before succumbing to their wounds. "71% to 82% of all shots taken" miss the target and "shot placement is, for all practical purposes, random".

In another study from Maryland, archers who had passed a pre-season accuracy test claimed that 82% of deer hit were recovered within 24 hours.

Danish licensed bowhunters are required to complete a report every time that they kill a roe deer. (To become a licensed bowhunter in Denmark it is necessary to pass a very demanding proficiency test, including a test of accuracy in which five of six arrows must hit within the vital area of game targets ranging from roe deer to pheasant in size at unknown distances up to 25 m. Only 2% of Danish bowhunters use traditional equipment.) For 1999–2004, these reports showed that 576 arrows were released at roe deer. 92.5% of these shots resulted in a dead roe deer being collected by the hunter, and 2.6% are documented as misses. In 5% of reports the deer was hit and wounded (as indicated by bodily fluids on the ground or on the arrow), but not recovered by the hunter. The European Bowhunters Association states that "this percentage compares favorably with other means of harvesting roe deer in Europe."

References

References

  1. (2008). "The Traditional Bowyer's Bible, Volume 4". The Lyons Press.
  2. Kroeber, Theodora. (2004). "Ishi in Two Worlds: a biography of the last wild Indian in North America". [[University of California Press]].
  3. Pope, Saxton. (1925). "Hunting with the Bow and Arrow". G. P. Putnam's Sons.
  4. Pope, Saxton. (1926). "Adventurous Bowmen: field notes on African archery". [[G. P. Putnam's Sons]].
  5. Bertalan, Dan. (2007). "Traditional Bowyers Encyclopedia: The Bowhunting and Bowmaking World of the Nation's Top Crafters of Longbows and Recurves". [[Skyhorse Pub.]].
  6. "Bow Sizing Guide".
  7. "Carbon Arrow University – Speed & Kinetic Energy".
  8. Dr. Ed Ashby. "ARROW LETHALITY Part IV: The Physics of Arrow Penetration".
  9. "Dr. Ashby Reports 1996 Dr. W.E (Ed) Ashby".
  10. Woodrow, Ross. (September 2013). "Ground blinds are worth considering". TR Tribune.
  11. Jon. "Bowfishing equipment tips". HuntHD.com.
  12. "Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 (c. 69)".
  13. Archer's Craft. Adrian E Hodgkin. Llanerch Press; Facsimile of 1951 edition (31 May 1996). {{ISBN. 1-897853-80-7. {{ISBN. 978-1-897853-80-1
  14. "Bowhunting, The Alternative Calibre – About".
  15. (17 April 2014). "Jahiseadus sai riigikogus napi heakskiidu – Eesti uudised".
  16. (7 November 2014). "Deer and Bear Hunting Regulations – NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation".
  17. "DOC Hunting Guide".
  18. New Zealand Department of Conservation. "Activity Finder – Hunting".
  19. "New Zealand Bowhunters Society".
  20. (13 June 2009). "More Bowhunting Information". Australian Bowhunters Association.
  21. Victorian Department of Sustainability and Environment. "Game Hunting in Victoria".
  22. "New South Wales Game Council".
  23. Australian Bowhunters Association. "More Bowhunting Information".
  24. "Government abolishes Game Council NSW".
  25. Australian Bowhunters Association. "Bowhunting in Australia".
  26. "Bowhunting in Zimbabwe".
  27. "Bowhunting in Zimbabwe".
  28. Merritt Clifton. (2 August 2015). "Death of Cecil: Zimbabwe Parks & Wildlife responds – Animals 24-7".
  29. Stephen S. Ditchkoff. (1998). "Wounding Rates of White-Tailed Deer With Traditional Archery Equipment". People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.
  30. (1996). "ARROW LETHALITY. Part I: Introduction – The Need for Knowledge".
  31. Horace Gore – Whitetail Project Director, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. (1996). "ARROW LETHALITY. Part I: Introduction – The Need for Knowledge".
  32. "2008 Proc. Annu. Conf. SEAFWA Wounding Rates of White-tailed Deer with Modern Archery Equipment". Quality Deer Management Association staff.
  33. (May 2005). "Evaluation of the Danish Bowhunting Association, the Danish National Forest and Nature Agency's Statistics on Roedeer (Capreolus Capreolus) shot with bow and arrow in Denmark between 1 October 1999 – 15 January 2004". European Bowhunters Association.
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