Archie, as I have said, I hunt a lot of days and I have never seen an arrow in a deer or elk that I didn't just put there. For one, they break or get pulled. I'm sure you can find one, but I don't believe all the stories, especially by folks that I have never even seen out in the woods during fall.
Ya know, the idea of a test sounds good. Yup, we should be proficient. But the format of the test is what I question.
I don't shoot 30 yards at critters, period. Why on earth is it so important for me to be able to show proficiency at some stupid range like that ( for me..... next guy might be capable and THAT is what brings up the issue). More important should be the training that you need to stay within your range, even if it is only 5 yards.
Then..... so I have a high speed compound with pins out to 70 or 80 yards, heck, even 100 yards. Do they make those folks shoot out to the range of their lowest pin ? In the wind ? From a tree, between trees and branches as in hunting, not field archery ?
Finally, all that said and done, so I tested out to 30 yards, hit em all ( damn I'm good), then the big ol buck walks by at 60 and the arrows are flying. How do you legislate that ? How do you test for that ?
You know, the industry has raised all kinds of hell about making archery more accessible, make it so easy even a near totally disabled person can do it, a 5 year old child can do it...and then they turn around and say but not you, you can't shoot out to 30 yards and WE think you should be able. No hunting for you.
CHuckC