I personally know of a number of gun hunters who have had their crossbows set-up in an outdoor store and have gone hunting without ever having actually released a bolt from one.
About the same as muzzle loader/ shotgun season. The muzzle loaders and sabot slugs these days are far above what were originaly intended. Both are faster than an average 45-70 theae days.
I have no problem with crossbows they really arent any easier or harder to use than a compound bow.
Dont care. More hunters the better.
Bow snobs are like fly fishing snobs, suck it up
Crossbows only ruin bow season for the bedwetters and crybabies.
We have had crossbow hunting in Ontario for a good number of years now (more than I can remember).
Our Early Bow runs from the 1st of October (regardless of what day that falls on every year) until the Gun Hunt. You can use any bow, traditional, compound or crossbow.
You can also use any bow during the gun hunt (generally the first two weeks of November) and then the late bow starts right after the gun season and save one week of blackpowder in December, you can bow hunt until New Years Eve.
Myth - a crossbow gives you some great advantage over other bows.
While it takes "less time" to get "huntable" with a crossbow it doesn't extend your range or killing power etc. It is no more effective than compound bows with their peep sights, fiber optic pins, overdraws, stablizers, carbon fiber limbs and risers some with range finder attachments.
The jump from a modern compound to a crossbow is "far less of any perceived advantage" than going from instinctively shooting a longbow or a recurve to a compound.
I shoot a recurve and a crossbow, I skipped over the compounds all together.
If you can't shoot your crossbow in the "bow season" then it has "no advantage" unless you are hunting maybe in urban areas where firearms would not be permitted.
So I do have an issue when the "high-tech" compound shooters have a problem with crossbow hunters. If they think crossbows are "unfair" then maybe the season should be made for "primitive bow only" - no sights etc.
And at least here in Ontario, contrary to what some might believe, very few guys with 350 bucks went out and bought crossbows and flooded the woods shooting everything in sight. It still takes practice - it's still only effective at "normal" bow range (35 yards is still a long shot - yes, some guys will shoot 50 or more, but the "guy" who buys a bargain basement bow and equips it with accessories from Walmart will have trouble consistently hitting a target at 30 much less taking down a deer).
I spent more on my crossbow, getting it kitted out, than I did for most of my rifles and took thousands of shots trying different bolts with different broadheads getting it tweaked right in.
The myth that you go to Wally World, spend $299 on a bargain basement Barnett - buy a pack of $10 broadheads and with "no work or practice" go out and shoot a deer is just non-sense.
The only thing it has in common with a "gun" is the trigger - other than that it's "just a bow".
We have had crossbow hunting in Ontario for a good number of years now (more than I can remember).
Our Early Bow runs from the 1st of October (regardless of what day that falls on every year) until the Gun Hunt. You can use any bow, traditional, compound or crossbow.
You can also use any bow during the gun hunt (generally the first two weeks of November) and then the late bow starts right after the gun season and save one week of blackpowder in December, you can bow hunt until New Years Eve.
Myth - a crossbow gives you some great advantage over other bows.
While it takes "less time" to get "huntable" with a crossbow it doesn't extend your range or killing power etc. It is no more effective than compound bows with their peep sights, fiber optic pins, overdraws, stablizers, carbon fiber limbs and risers some with range finder attachments.
The jump from a modern compound to a crossbow is "far less of any perceived advantage" than going from instinctively shooting a longbow or a recurve to a compound.
I shoot a recurve and a crossbow, I skipped over the compounds all together.
If you can't shoot your crossbow in the "bow season" then it has "no advantage" unless you are hunting maybe in urban areas where firearms would not be permitted.
So I do have an issue when the "high-tech" compound shooters have a problem with crossbow hunters. If they think crossbows are "unfair" then maybe the season should be made for "primitive bow only" - no sights etc.
And at least here in Ontario, contrary to what some might believe, very few guys with 350 bucks went out and bought crossbows and flooded the woods shooting everything in sight. It still takes practice - it's still only effective at "normal" bow range (35 yards is still a long shot - yes, some guys will shoot 50 or more, but the "guy" who buys a bargain basement bow and equips it with accessories from Walmart will have trouble consistently hitting a target at 30 much less taking down a deer).
I spent more on my crossbow, getting it kitted out, than I did for most of my rifles and took thousands of shots trying different bolts with different broadheads getting it tweaked right in.
The myth that you go to Wally World, spend $299 on a bargain basement Barnett - buy a pack of $10 broadheads and with "no work or practice" go out and shoot a deer is just non-sense.
The only thing it has in common with a "gun" is the trigger - other than that it's "just a bow".
Splitting the ranks is a sure way destroy the sport.Stand united or hang separately.....because you personally don't crossbows as laws get passed,you say nothing next it's compound bows,you say nothing,then ban any bows that use sights,you say nothing,then the handful of traditional archers left have their sport shut down as it is too primitive to be humane. ..all hypothetical BS created by not supporting one another IMO...........like some fly fisherman looking down on anyone that uses another style to catch fish. Harold
Bow snobs are like fly fishing snobs, suck it up