Maybe this should be in the form forum...
I just wanted to pass on a little insight to others that are thinking of trying to cant.
I'm not a great shot (yet).lol
I hunt from the ground only.
I sit on a pad only or right on the ground..no chair.
I normally use some sort of natural blind..piled sticks.
Anyway, it's always a battle to get into a shooting position.
There I am..sitting on my butt..and I see a deer.
Now I gotta spin around and get my knees under me all the while keeping low and slow trying to hide behind my blind.
Then raise up so I can shoot with an almost vertical bow.
That's a lot of movement..I'm 6'2" 230#'s and bundled up for cold weather I'm a big ole blob out there moving around.
Somehow I've managed to make it happen a few times like that.
This year I've decided NO MORE OF THAT!
I WILL BECOME MORE VERSATILE WITH MY SHOTS!
ok..well.. I said it..now to the doin of it.
I started trying canting and such with a 56" recurve.
Tell ya what..that was very difficult. Finicky little thing.
So I pulled out an old 66" long bow to try.
WAAAAY more forgiving of my errors.
The extra length is a bit more of a pain to get used to as far as ground clearance goes...but that's the whole point here..be more versatile.
I've been able to get pretty decent canting the bow from a crouch..that wasn't too hard.
What I'm working on now is shooting while on my butt with a 66" bow.
This was one of my main goals..
It can be done.
Yes..the bow is more horizontal than vertical.
Yes it's weird feeling.
Yes it's hard to get used to.
yes I am getting better with it faster than I thought I would.
The biggest problem for me when shooting the bow almost horizontal is having the bottom part of the string pulling up to the side of my body.
With a slight shift in body position/leaning over a tad more I can just squeeze out full draw.
That's a problem that wouldn't be so bad with a shorter bow..but the longer bow is way more forgiving for me..so I take the mountain of good for the ant hill of bad.
I truly feel a long(er) bow is more forgiving of my errors.
I also think nice big feathers help too.
The three biggest things I noticed that I wanted to pass on are these...
1. get "OK" with the possibility you might smack the bottom tip on the ground when figuring this stuff out. Put a tip protector or whatever on it if it helps ya. But you just gotta get to the point of not caring about it..you have enough to worry about with weird shooting forms.
2. Give it a SERIOUS try. You gotta shoot it in these weird positions a lot just to get over the weird feel of it. I know it took an easy 40 shots just to get to the point I thought it MIGHT be possible to get ok shooting like this. Very easy to shoot a doz shots and say "this is too weird..I'm done"
Keep going and let your body/mind adjust.
3. You gotta concentrate on the spot you want to hit guys.
I'm a guy who has always drew/settled in/released. Part of my "settling in" was looking at the target and kinda checking where my arrow was pointed. Not really sighting down the arrow, but just sorta being aware of where it was pointing.
Shooting at odd angles just blows the whole "sight picture" I'm used to.
You really gotta get into just looking at "the spot" and let your body go on auto pilot guys. Get your conscience mind outta there... It'll take a bit for your body/mind to learn to do what you want it to...but it will with genuine serious practice.
ok..
Now I'm not a pro..or some know it all..that's for damn sure.
What I am is a trad hunter.
I'm struggling with a battle to become more versatile.
Maybe there's someone else around here struggling with the same thing..or thinking about it.
This is what I've noticed thus far..maybe it'll help someone.