- Location
- The Conservative part of Ontario
One of the reasons I went to a crossbow, in fact the only reason, was that I could not get the time to practice with a compound. I had a compound, I even hunted with it, however, there were only a couple of years that I felt confident enough to do so. Yes, there are guys that can shoot as well with a compound as I can with a crossbow, but I'm guessing it's not the average guy.Everyone has their opinion, but this is going a little over board really.
What I don't agree in is the Comment made on Practice. Everyone has it bent in minds that Compounds need a lot of Practice. Bows these days Do Not need the practice they used to 25 years ago yes, but updated compounds do not. The way they are built, setup and shooting, one can put a little time into a target practice section and be as deadly as they we're the last year. Anchor points don't change, train yourself to use the same one all the time.
What bothers me is Crossbows are taking over and people that don't care if they can hit a dime or not on a target, sit in trees and hits game and loses it and the Non hunter walks onto it or they see a duck walking around in Central Park in Toronto with an arrow stuck in it, not from a crossbow but a compound . That gives all Bow hunters a bad name, Crossbow hunters are archers but practice shot placement and eithical shots and it will put us all in the same catagory...
With a crossbow, I hit each bull on the target bag consistently, and have since I first sighted it in.
With my compound, every season, it was a struggle at first just to keep hitting the damned bag, never mind the targets painted on it.





















































