With 40 years of bowhunting, I have settled on Hoyt for my archery gear... surprise, surprise...
But, most manufacturers make a quality product these days.
Ignore the "get a rifle" advice... "once you draw back, you'll never go back."

Ignore the "get a rifle" advice... "once you draw back, you'll never go back."
And you don't hunt before you drop the string???
I would argue that there is more "hunting" with archery gear before the shot takes place, than there is with a rifle.
And you don't hunt before you drop the string???
I would argue that there is more "hunting" with archery gear before the shot takes place, than there is with a rifle.
And you don't hunt before you drop the string???
I would argue that there is more "hunting" with archery gear before the shot takes place, than there is with a rifle.
You know I'm screwing with you, right?
Now that I finally live somewhere that has an archery season I've thought about picking it up. Just short on time and money.
I have been out of the archery game for a while...... Maybe ten years or so... Insufficient time to practice and feel comfortable with my accuracy, so sold the bow......
I shot my neighbor's Hoyt..... "Carbon Spider" I think..... Brought back a lot of memories, while at the same time marvelling how far bows have come since I sold mine......
Brad grab a crossbow if you don't have time to practice with a compound or more traditional gear. So many more hunting opportunities open up with archery hunts 3 months deer season and Sunday hunting everywhere. Though crossbows will give you a bit of an edge ( less movement to loose a bolt on Bucky and a bit more range) it's still archery hunting!
Just do it!
I heard crossbow season is the same as rifle season, so you don't get an edge with a crossbow.
Are you a strong guy? My advice would be to shoot a bow that you are strong enough for. I started with a carbon knight, great bow. There is such marketing hype in archery. No need to upgrade unless you want to have a marginally lighter bow, or a marginally faster bow. That said, I sold my carbon knight and bought the PSE full throttle with a 70lb draw weight. At the 20 yard line at the Calgary archery center, my 500 gr arrows would go through the target butts. Pain in the butt as I would have to refletch the odd arrow. It wouldn't go through new target butts, but it would for the ones that were shot to sh*t.




























