Also remember when you are elevated your going to shoot a little higher then normal so you want to aim a little lower anyway!
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Jumping the String - Where do you Aim?
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I don't shoot a deer that has its head down. In that position they can duck much further and faster than if they have their head up looking at another deer or what have you. Not with the head up and alert or looking at me though.
Works for me and I have not missed a deer due to one ducking the string while doing this.
I did stick a limb once though but it didn't duck.
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Originally posted by Tx_Wader View PostI don't shoot a deer that has its head down. In that position they can duck much further and faster than if they have their head up looking at another deer or what have you. Not with the head up and alert or looking at me though.
Works for me and I have not missed a deer due to one ducking the string while doing this.
I did stick a limb once though but it didn't duck.
This^^^ is solid advice and I agree with 100%. When a deer has its head down it acts as a counterweight and helps the body drop faster.
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Jumping the String - Where do you Aim?
I'd rather have a deer's head down eating (especially facing away) on the draw than up looking around and alert .... but that's just me. I'm more interested in having the shot angle right with the onside shoulder forward. No way in heck am I going to throw a third "have to" in the mix. That's a lotta things to line up with even fewer opportunities for it all to lineup perfectly. Get it and zip it!
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Jumping the String - Where do you Aim?
I posted these pics in another thread a few days ago. Here's a deer ducking my arrow from Sunday.
Everything about the shot was was great and placement was right where I wanted. Other than her front right leg being back but that didn't effect the shot. The arrow was going right where I placed it.
Maybe I'll start waiting for them to raise their head up. Shot was 20 yards or so.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Originally posted by AntlerCollector View PostThis^^^ is solid advice and I agree with 100%. When a deer has its head down it acts as a counterweight and helps the body drop faster.
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As Doc said, focus on shooting the deer at the right time. A calm relaxed animal is less likely to duck a shot than one that's on edge. Work on drawing slow and practicing from sitting positions if you hunt out of a ground blind. Quiet your bow as much as possible, easy to spook deer with an arrow sliding across a rest, rattling of quiver mounts, etc. Speed is not your issue, its stealth. Even the fastest bows out there do not break the speed of sound, therefore the sound of the shot gets to the deer before the arrow. I've seen shots of deer jumping guys strings that are shooting maxed out bows that are smoking fast, almost all of those were because the deer was alert at the time of shot. Focus on stealth and being relaxed, if you need to lower the poundage of the bow to draw it slower and hold it longer then I would consider that as well.
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