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When I started hunting deer with bow, around 10...(wow 11 years ago already!) My father told me if I can put 5 arrows in a pie plate a 20 yds I was good to go hunting. The thing you need to worry about is making sure he is calm in the stand as that deer approaches. That is something you can't teach and all the target practice in the world won't matter. Deer fever is that split second we lose focus on finishing the job and think about holding the trophy. If he is accurate when he does decided to shoot don't fret over him taking some days off. Me on the other hand...I'm addicted to shooting.
Hi, my name is Jarad and I've been shooting traditional for 15 years.
-------------------- 55# Kodiak Mag
"Stay calm, Pick a spot."
Zwickey, the 1911 of Broadheads. ->>>--------> Posts: 269 | From: Indiana | Registered: Sep 2010
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Me and my son have a judo safari in the backyard with small stuffed animals. You can buy the stuffed animals in the pet department at wal mart for a couple of bucks each. Me and my boy both get bored just shooting groups. Chris
Posts: 226 | From: Fayetteville, NC | Registered: Apr 2005
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quote:Originally posted by Hawkeye: I'd get a tennis ball, a couple of judo points and challenge him to a 10 minute competition 2 or 3 times a week. Make sure it fits his day, like maybe just before or after supper, when there are no "good" programs on, etc.
Maybe only 5 rounds of "judo horse" where the guy who gets closest tosses the ball for the next challenge and chooses the distance/complexity. Contest may go to 25 tries before either of you has had too much. Bragging rights may be prize enough, depending on his personality.
90% of the practice I've had that made me feel hunt-ready has come from judos and a little ball...
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I've been through this with my oldest son whose now 17.
He's a crack shot and liked to shoot 3D when he was 12-16 and won alot of 3D shoots, but didn't really want to hunt when he got old enough to. (Girl Friends) I REALLY wanted him to bowhunt with me, but it seemed like the more i talked about it or tried to get him to, the less interested in it he became, so i no longer push him.
He's a really good shot and he doesn't practice as much as i want him too, but thats fine as long as he understands what he's up against in the woods.
He went one afternoon last season and took his compound with him and thats fine with me because he shoots it well, just not as much as he shoots his widow.
He came back to the house and seemed a little perplexed almost like he was avoiding me on purpose. I knew something was up, so i waited untill he was ready to tell me what happened.
He dropped his bow out of the treestand.
I also believe, There's to much of the trying to keep up with the world going on with teen's nowadays. Techno junk, facebook garbage and so on.
-------------------- A trophy is in the eye of the beholder. Posts: 648 | From: Peterstown, WV | Registered: Aug 2007
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As has been stated, if you can find a way to make it fun it'll go a long way. As a kid I LOVED roving with the guy that I hunted with during our summer scouting trips. We'd shoot at stumps, pine cones, leaves, etc. It was really good practice and we'd compete as we shot, closes arrow gets a point and got to pick the next target.
I would also try to throw in a little pressure on one shot a session if you can. If you're stump shooting with him, say something like "Okay that log is your buck, let's see if you can put one in the vitals". I remember my mentor doing that with me and it added just a little something to the shot. A couple of shots like that where he pinwheels the target will make both of you feel good about his ability to get it done on the real thing.
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I've always been a firm believer that you work on form at a blank bale, learn your arrow trajectory and sight picture on the 3D course, and learn about picking a spot and concentrating on that spot on the line shooting targets.
but this is what you should do for fun and practice all year preparing for hunting season...
i like the the tennis ball game, an the stuffed animal safari in the yard sounds like a hoot....but I'm a believer in getting your hunting set up dialed in and your quiver loaded at least 2-3 weeks before your season opens, and shoot only that bow with broadheads, and only 2-3 arrows a day.
i keep a 3D deer set up in the back corner of my shooting area. I stalk the deer from different angles each morning, and take one shot only...at noon, and in the evening i do it from a different angle at different yardage...... by this time of year you are either ready, or you are not, and it's the first shot that counts.
I've used life size deer targets on foam blocks too.... if you want to shoot more, go pull that arrow, and shoot again after stalking to a different angle.
i don't do a lot of tree stand hunting so i have no recommendations there. it all boils down to you are either ready, or you are not.
as far as encouraging teen age boys to go hunting.... i believe your success is going to depend on which way the wind is blowing.... a little perfume and a short skirt will trump elk urine and spotting critters in the woods every time..... good luck to you on that one bro...
quote:Originally posted by Kirkll: I've always been a firm believer that you work on form at a blank bale, learn your arrow trajectory and sight picture on the 3D course, and learn about picking a spot and concentrating on that spot on the line shooting targets.
but this is what you should do for fun and practice all year preparing for hunting season...
i like the the tennis ball game, an the stuffed animal safari in the yard sounds like a hoot....but I'm a believer in getting your hunting set up dialed in and your quiver loaded at least 2-3 weeks before your season opens, and shoot only that bow with broadheads, and only 2-3 arrows a day.
i keep a 3D deer set up in the back corner of my shooting area. I stalk the deer from different angles each morning, and take one shot only...at noon, and in the evening i do it from a different angle at different yardage...... by this time of year you are either ready, or you are not, and it's the first shot that counts.
I've used life size deer targets on foam blocks too.... if you want to shoot more, go pull that arrow, and shoot again after stalking to a different angle.
i don't do a lot of tree stand hunting so i have no recommendations there. it all boils down to you are either ready, or you are not.
as far as encouraging teen age boys to go hunting.... i believe your success is going to depend on which way the wind is blowing.... a little perfume and a short skirt will trump elk urine and spotting critters in the woods every time..... good luck to you on that one bro...
Someone say short skirt???
I made it clear to my GF October-December is my time. The rest of the year is hers.
-------------------- 55# Kodiak Mag
"Stay calm, Pick a spot."
Zwickey, the 1911 of Broadheads. ->>>--------> Posts: 269 | From: Indiana | Registered: Sep 2010
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I never hit said stage, When i was little dad said i once shot absolutely daylight to dark, only stopping to pee. I was always a weird kid i guess lol. I met my now GF of 5 years in 8th grade, handed her a bow, and shes been my hunting partner ever since, well her and dad. I am now 19 and still obssesed with archery. Now my little brother on the other hand started hunting at the same age i did, Right now though he reminds me of that half-retarded spike, running around like an idiot looking for love with everything with 4 legs. I just hope hes not like 90% of spikes around here, cause somebody will shoot him lol.
-------------------- ------------ Dalton Team By the Book Gen. 21:20- "And GOD was with the lad; and he grew, and dwelt in the wilderness, and became an archer." Posts: 686 | From: Ashe County, North Carolina | Registered: Dec 2009
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I don't believe in putting any restictions on childrens hunting or adults for that matter.When I was his age we would get out our bows 2 weeks before the season and just try to hit close to where the kill zone is.It was all about fun and not because we had to.I dont believe in form or anything except for target shooting because your trying to hit a small dot 70 yards away so it probably helps.Does that mean you have to be a target shooter to kill deer?The more he hunts the more he will feel the need to practice.There are much more important things to teach him in the woods that have nothing to do with hunting.
Posts: 163 | From: new york | Registered: Nov 2010
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