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Author Topic: Stealth arrows  (Read 225 times)

Offline kybowman

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Stealth arrows
« on: January 15, 2010, 11:52:00 AM »
A few months ago my loving wife came home from a day of shopping and said to me in a monotone voice, "I bought you something I found at the peddlers mall today, it's in the trunk."  I dragged my butt outa the lazyboy, get the keys and walk out in the driveway.  I pop the trunk, and there is an old recurve laying there with some arrows duct taped to it.

My mind was trying to process this visual info because it was a complete surprise. She did not tell me it was a bow!!!

When I picked it up I realized it was a beautiful 1966 Bear Kodiak in near pristine condition with five "black" Browning arrows duct taped around the limbs.

I was in a state of shock!!  Could not believe my eyes!!!  What the hell?????

Well, after the initial shock I composed myself and ran into the house like a little kid that just got what he wanted for christmas.  I carefully unwrapped the duct tape from around the limbs and proceeded to "clean er up."  The more I looked at the bow while cleaning the more astonished I was at the beautiful condition of the bow!!  What a treasure from some old forgotten bowhunter!!!

I digress.  Anyway to get to my topic.  A few days later I was in the back yard shooting this beautiful find.  I was shooting my usual xx75 autum orange shafts, xx78 camo shafts, and woodgrain carbons.  My carbons I have fletched with all white feathers and my xx75's with barred natural with barred flo green cock.  I look in my quiver and see the black brownings and curiousity got the better of me.  I pulled one out, knocked it up, and let her fly.

I stood there for a moment in a daze.??/  What was that feeling?  I could not believe the sensation at the release of that arrow.  It was like I just released an invisible missle downrange to the target with no visual feedback to my senses.

I stood there processing all these feelings that were running through me. Thinking about the old fella who used to hunt with this bow and these "stealth" arrows, and wondering if the old guys knew something more about hunting with these old sticks than we do.  We with all our "new" and up to date technologies and "improvements" to the art of hunting "traditionally".  

Then it occurred to me, if I can't see this arrow fly then what about the animal I take aim upon.  The old brownings are completely black, with two black hens and a blue cock feather. they are aluminum shafts with a black coating and fly beautifully.

Did these "old" guys know something we don't???  Opinions and comments please!!!      :campfire:

Offline maineac

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #1 on: January 15, 2010, 12:02:00 PM »
Interesting idea.  Is it the sound of the bow that causes deer to "jump the string", or the peripheral vision catching the movement of the arrow coming at them.
The season gave him perfect mornings, hunter's moons and fields of freedom found only by walking them with a predator's stride.
                                                              Robert Holthouser

Offline pcappy08

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #2 on: January 15, 2010, 12:04:00 PM »
Congrats on the new bow! Only thing that i can offer is in large part the same reasoning many of us were attracted to this method of archery....New doesnt necessarily mean better!
Great Northern Super Ghost
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Morrison Cheyenne
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Online lpcjon2

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #3 on: January 15, 2010, 12:31:00 PM »
Congrats on the bow,can i send your wife a wish list for me.
Some people live an entire lifetime and wonder if they have ever made a
difference in the world, but the Marines don’t have that problem.
—President Ronald Reagan

Offline Orion

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #4 on: January 15, 2010, 12:35:00 PM »
I'm one of those old guys who was around when those Brownings were early on the scene.  We live and learn.  They looked cool, but as you found out, very difficult to see, particularly in low light.  Over the years, most folks went to lighter colored shafts and brighter fletching.  I still use "stealth" arrows for hunting though -- stained black woodies with natural barred turkey feathers, minimal cresting and a white nock.  Usually, I can see the white nock all the way to the animal, but not always. My reason for using them is not that the animal might not be able to see the arrow coming at it.  Rather, it's to make it more difficult for the animal to pick up slight movement of the arrows in my bow quiver due to movements I make.

Offline Ragnarok Forge

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #5 on: January 15, 2010, 12:57:00 PM »
I hunt with bright arrows for everything but turkeys.  They can see color clearly. Wild turkey fletch and no tape or cresting on turkey arrows.  FMJ axis brown camo shafts.  The only thin bright is the flourescent green nock.  I can see it in flight on the way to the target.  Deer, Elk, Cougar, and Bear arrows get white zebra stripe tapes and FL. Tangerine fletch on them.  I want to be able to find my arrows easily after the shot.  These animals see in black and white so the colors don't really matter.
Clay Walker
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Offline JimB

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #6 on: January 15, 2010, 02:13:00 PM »
I don't know about Browning stealth arrows but I would sure be nice to that wife.

Offline kybowman

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #7 on: January 15, 2010, 02:18:00 PM »
Yeah, I don't know how she puts up with me. I guess after 33 years she has learned how to. Couldn't ask for a better woman!!

Offline Killdeer

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #8 on: January 15, 2010, 04:28:00 PM »
It is almost like the Archery Gods were looking after that bow, once the original user could no longer grasp it. You ever get that feeling? That the Fates or whatever make sure that the bow goes where it has to, and bides out its time until it can get to the one who will love it all over again?

A long time ago I read about "bird arrows". I don't know where, maybe in the first Archers' Bible or something around that time. But I remember reading about bird arrows, painted black, which made it hard for the game to see it as it headed toward them. I was inspired. At the age of fifteen, I made my first arrows. I started with old beat-up shafts, and repainted and fletched them. Along with these, I made a "bird bolt". I know, a bolt is a short crossbow arrow, but "bird bolt" sounds cool. I painted it black and fletched it with peahen tail feathers. I then capped it off with a .38 Special case scrounged from the pistol range under the bleachers at McClure Field, a ball field at N.O.B. Norfolk.

Some cases were easy to deprime with an ice pick. Some I had to drill out with my dad's hand drill. I glued one on the end of the arrow and tapped a small nail down the flash hole. I shot it a few times, but mostly it lay fallow in the quiver. I shot mostly targets then.

Then, in my senior year of high school, my dad bought a piece of land to put a house on. There was a stable nearby, where I kept my horse, and a campground, where I lived while working at the stable that summer. And crows lived there, too. They mobbed my beloved redtails, and so gained my enmity. One day, a mob of them were gathered in a tree, having run off a noble hawk. They were laughing and telling hawk jokes over a few caterpillars, and I snuck up on them. The lookout, face full of grubs, saw me and let out a garbled "Thquawwk!!", whereupon all took flight. I let fly from my Ben Pearson Colt the magnificent, gleaming bird bolt, like ebony lightning, guided by Orion himself. It knocked one sleek shimmering feather from the smug corvid's tail, letting it flutter down within easy sight of this excited poacher. Gleefully, I picked it up and ceremoniously fastened it in my hair. I had the trophy, had done the deed, taught the lesson, and didn't have to deal with a mess. Perfect!

Poachers should never win, though. and the Cosmic Game Wardens had caught me. I had no truck to confiscate, no license to revoke. No money to dun out of me, and only a twenty-dollar bow in my hand. They took the arrow. I never saw it again after it winked out of sight behind the crow.

Killdeer   :archer:
Long, long afterward, in an oak I found the arrow, still unbroke;
And the song, from beginning to end, I found again in the heart of a friend.

~Longfellow

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Offline hayslope

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #9 on: January 15, 2010, 04:40:00 PM »
Killi,

Those "Cosmic Game Wardens" took that stealth arrow so that you (and all that you shared this story with) could savor that one ebony bolt doing precisely what it was intended to do.  Had it been returned and used once again and failed.....well, let's just surmise that it's final resting place may have been suited to something not unlike a tomato stake!
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“Only after the last tree has been cut down…the last river has been poisoned…the last fish caught, only then will you find that money cannot be eaten." - Cree Indian Prophesy

Offline Aeronut

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #10 on: January 15, 2010, 05:00:00 PM »
I used to paint the aluminum shafts I had with flat black spray paint.  That made them just about invisible in the thick timber where I hunt.

Dennis

Offline turkey522

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #11 on: January 15, 2010, 05:12:00 PM »
Congrats and enjoy.Don't forget to thank your wife,take her out to dinner or something she would enjoy doing..Never know what she might bring home for you next time.

Offline Shakes.602

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #12 on: January 15, 2010, 05:37:00 PM »
Hmmmm........Gives me something else to try against those Sharp Eyed Turkeys!!  :help:    :biglaugh:
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Offline Rob DiStefano

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #13 on: January 15, 2010, 06:08:00 PM »
quote:
Originally posted by Killdeer:
It is almost like the Archery Gods were looking after that bow, once the original user could no longer grasp it. You ever get that feeling? That the Fates or whatever make sure that the bow goes where it has to, and bides out its time until it can get to the one who will love it all over again?

A long time ago I read about "bird arrows". I don't know where, maybe in the first Archers' Bible or something around that time. But I remember reading about bird arrows, painted black, which made it hard for the game to see it as it headed toward them. I was inspired. At the age of fifteen, I made my first arrows. I started with old beat-up shafts, and repainted and fletched them. Along with these, I made a "bird bolt". I know, a bolt is a short crossbow arrow, but "bird bolt" sounds cool. I painted it black and fletched it with peahen tail feathers. I then capped it off with a .38 Special case scrounged from the pistol range under the bleachers at McClure Field, a ball field at N.O.B. Norfolk.

Some cases were easy to deprime with an ice pick. Some I had to drill out with my dad's hand drill. I glued one on the end of the arrow and tapped a small nail down the flash hole. I shot it a few times, but mostly it lay fallow in the quiver. I shot mostly targets then.

Then, in my senior year of high school, my dad bought a piece of land to put a house on. There was a stable nearby, where I kept my horse, and a campground, where I lived while working at the stable that summer. And crows lived there, too. They mobbed my beloved redtails, and so gained my enmity. One day, a mob of them were gathered in a tree, having run off a noble hawk. They were laughing and telling hawk jokes over a few caterpillars, and I snuck up on them. The lookout, face full of grubs, saw me and let out a garbled "Thquawwk!!", whereupon all took flight. I let fly from my Ben Pearson Colt the magnificent, gleaming bird bolt, like ebony lightning, guided by Orion himself. It knocked one sleek shimmering feather from the smug corvid's tail, letting it flutter down within easy sight of this excited poacher. Gleefully, I picked it up and ceremoniously fastened it in my hair. I had the trophy, had done the deed, taught the lesson, and didn't have to deal with a mess. Perfect!

Poachers should never win, though. and the Cosmic Game Wardens had caught me. I had no truck to confiscate, no license to revoke. No money to dun out of me, and only a twenty-dollar bow in my hand. They took the arrow. I never saw it again after it winked out of sight behind the crow.

Killdeer    :wavey:    :archer:
IAM ~ The only government I trust is my .45-70 ... and my 1911.

Offline Drummer@Home

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #14 on: January 15, 2010, 07:43:00 PM »
Yea really! not to run of with this thread but the girl can write     :thumbsup:
Zen without realization of the body is empty speculation. If I could only stop dropping the BOW!!!!!!

Offline maineac

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Re: Stealth arrows
« Reply #15 on: January 15, 2010, 08:03:00 PM »
Thanks for bringing us with you on your memory train.
The season gave him perfect mornings, hunter's moons and fields of freedom found only by walking them with a predator's stride.
                                                              Robert Holthouser

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