Deer hunting -old style

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St. Louis County hunter becomes first in the state to take deer with atlatl

http://mdc.mo.gov/newsroom/st-louis-county-hunter-becomes-first-state-take-deer-atlatl

ST. LOUIS -- On opening day of the Missouri November firearms deer season, a Show-Me –State hunter used the most ancient of weapons to bag a deer in modern day St. Louis County.

Luke Boenker, 54, of Maryland Heights, became the first hunter in Missouri to take a deer using an atlatl—a primitive spear-throwing weapon—when he harvested a four-point buck just after 4 p.m. on Nov. 12. He was hunting 30 feet up in a tree stand on private property in the vicinity of Clayton and Clarkson Roads.

“The buck approached to within about 15 yards of the tree I was sitting in,” said Boenker. Boenker grunted to get the deer to pause. He took advantage of the opportunity, letting loose the fatal shot, which made contact with the buck at its back and penetrated the deer’s rib cage. The buck continued for approximately 150 yards more before dropping, Boenker said.

“It was the ultimate feeling,” recalled Boenker of the experience.

The atlatl predates the bow and arrow. It is used to throw a 4-to 6-foot-long, spear-like projectile known as a dart. The atlatl is a wooden shaft approximately a foot-and-a-half long with a socket or knock at the rear to engage the dart.

The dart is placed along the shaft with its back end resting in the socket or knock. The hunter grips the atlatl near its front end and performs a forward throw using the upper arm and wrist. The flipping motion of the atlatl creates angular momentum that propels the dart with greater speed and power than can be achieved with the arm alone. Darts thrown from the weapon can achieve velocities of nearly 100 miles per hour.

Boenker constructed the atlatl himself from Osage-orange wood. He assembled the dart using a 7-foot ash shaft crafted by dart maker Bob Berg of New York and an Ace broad head tip.

The atlatl became a legal method for taking deer in Missouri for the first time last year, during the 2010 firearms deer season. Boenker is the first person known to actually have taken a deer in Missouri with the weapon. The atlatl may be used during all portions of the firearms deer season, with the exception of the muzzleloader portion.

Boenker said that he was relatively new to using the atlatl, having taken it up only three months ago. He was introduced to and mentored in the use of the weapon by his friend and president of the Missouri Atlatl Associate (MAA), Ron Mertz. Boenker is also an MAA member.

Boenker is not new to hunting, however. He’s has been pursuing deer with firearms and bow and arrow since age 16. He said he chose the atlatl because of the unique challenge it presented.

“I’d hunted with bows and guns before,” he said, “But I didn’t even load my guns this year. I wanted to do something different.”

He said he intends to take the tenderloins and back straps of his deer, and have the rest processed into hamburger.

The state’s second deer to be taken by atlatl was killed in northwest Missouri’s Grundy County Nov. 13 by Scott Rorebeck of Trenton. Rorebeck is a member of the MAA as well.

Complete information on Missouri hunting seasons and regulations can be found at the Department of Conservation’s website, www.mdc.mo.gov.

Additional information about the atlatl and related event listings are posted at the World Atlatl Association webpage, www.worldatlatl.org. To learn more about atlatl activities in Missouri, contact MAA president Ron Mertz at devoemertz@sbcglobal.net.
 
This guy has 2 videos now using a spear.

(ff to 6:15 if you want to skip the non spearing stuff)

[youtube]cjMkgwxObis[/youtube]

The guy mentioned in the article used an atlatl, which mean he actually did aim and throw the spear at the deer accurately.

The guy in this video barely threw it, it was more dropping a spear on a deer standing below. Not much skills required to do this.

http://www.worldatlatl.org/WhatisAtlatl.html
 
Takes skills for sure. Check out I Caveman. Really neat 2 or 3 part tv show about modern people going back to the primitive, they manage to kill with an atlatl. I however dont agree with it, same reason I don't bow hunt, and I love archery. I don't believe its ethical to make an animal suffer more then it's necessary. If you have the ability to make it quick and painless, then I believe it's your responsibility to use those methods, in most cases that would be a gun. Obviously in a survival situation that is not the case, and survival should be your primary concern.
 
Cue the ethics police..... If archery is ethical, or head shots, or running shots, or not having to pass a shooting test to qualify for a tag, etc, then legal is legal.
 
ethics is a personal thing, it will be different person to person but generally it does go along similar lines

pick bunch of snones, pick a target at 10yrs and tell me how many times will you hit the bullseye with a full forced fling?
the different ways humans found to move projectiles faster and faster wasnt just that, it was also more accurate with each contraption; from hand thrown to atlatl, to bow to xbow to hand cannons(eventually)

knowing how little vital areas are on deer size animal, considering how much movement has to be complited before the projectile is in flight, how much force is needed for a large, slow moving projectile to pierce through the tissue, the distance, and how quick does it put down the animal, Ill say using atlatl is hardly a way to go hunting

again, cudos to the guy who can do it, considering everything above Ill pass, you think you can do it? go right ahead, I wont stop you
 
This is gonna turn into the 688 yard elk thread.


Kudos to the spear job. Dead is dead, I dont rightly care how another man wants to get to that point.
 
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