Results 1 to 8 of 8
Thread: Bow hunting " rush"
-
08-11-2017, 09:48 #1
- Join Date
- Nov 2017
- Posts
- 11
Bow hunting " rush"
So I watch these videos and spoke to guys who hunted with bow. They say even in a hide, when you shoot an animal with a bow it's an amazing rush superior to the rifle . Is this true. Is the wait in the hide worth it? Any bowhunters here?
-
08-11-2017, 11:47 #2
- Join Date
- May 2014
- Age
- 67
- Posts
- 657
Re: Bow hunting " rush"
Time spent in the hide is an opportunity to watch animals and birds from up close and I seldom get bored. Take something to read for the quiet times and a camera. As for the rush, try stalking up close in the Bush for a real adrenaline high then learn to control it to be able to take an accurate shot.
-
08-11-2017, 11:53 #3
- Join Date
- Aug 2013
- Location
- Cape Town
- Age
- 49
- Posts
- 1,872
Re: Bow hunting " rush"
In short - yes.
-
08-11-2017, 12:02 #4
- Join Date
- May 2015
- Location
- J-Bay
- Age
- 44
- Posts
- 1,301
Re: Bow hunting " rush"
I hunt both, although less with a bow in the last couple of years. What I can say is while my success rate with a bow is lower, the feeling of accomplishment(walk and stalking) is higher for me. Outside of that the excitement or rush is similar on a proper walk and stalk on both. I don't necessarily have as much feeling of accomplishment shooting an animal out of a hide as its a fairly easy way of killing an animal. Similar to shooting for the pot off the bakkie in my opinion. Walk and stalking with a bow I think has made me a better rifle hunter. I am more purposeful in my movements, more aware of the sound I make and more expectant of an animal behind every bush, especially in the thicker stuff.
-
08-11-2017, 13:19 #5
- Join Date
- Jul 2011
- Location
- BFN Freestate
- Age
- 45
- Posts
- 12,074
Re: Bow hunting " rush"
Look, from a technical point of view, it must be so.
The rush you speak of is nothing more than the body supplying an adrenaline rush, which is a byproduct of our past where we had to physically kill the animal.
I have walked huge distances during hunts, the physical energy drain is enormous, also the adrenaline kicks in when you actively start to hunt, meaning spotted the animal and starts the stalk, this itself could be a very long process.
When bow hunting from a hide you don't spend any energy, also there is no stalk, you wait for clear shot and take it, adrenaline is not used in the form of muscle movement en hence the "rush" is more.
It's like when you drive in your car all daydreaming, suddenly the traffic stops and you brake like a madman to avoid an accident. Afterwards the body is flooded with adrenaline, I've seen people get all shaky, but the adrenaline ain't used for anything.
Same principle, call it a false "rush", feels more, but all dressed up and nowhere to go.
-
08-11-2017, 14:52 #6
- Join Date
- Jan 2017
- Location
- Pretoria East
- Posts
- 256
-
27-11-2017, 08:53 #7
- Join Date
- May 2017
- Age
- 43
- Posts
- 174
Re: Bow hunting " rush"
Been hunting with rifles most of my life since age 5....used to get "bok koors" when i was young but that was remedied by a slap behind the head. Later on that "koors" went away and the only time i got it again was if i was surprised by an animal.
Bow hunting is different in the sense that the anticipation builds. With a rifle you have many more options in shot placement than with a bow.
First you have to wait for an animal to come within range, secondly you have to wait for it to present a broadside or quartering away shot. Whilst waiting the adrenaline starts to pump through your veins in anticipation. You can actually hear the blood pumping in your ears.
But i have found that when I get to full draw that all goes away, time slows down to a point where you can see your arrow in flight and impact on the animal.
-
27-11-2017, 11:53 #8
- Join Date
- Aug 2011
- Location
- Randburg
- Age
- 38
- Posts
- 2,307
Re: Bow hunting " rush"
I agree. I once shot an Impala ram from a hide with a .357 rollie. The anticipation and waiting in silence, hardly breathing, while the herd slowly grazes in and moves around is hectic. I never get bokkoors otherwise, but that time was rough.
Bookmarks