Well yesterday evening I set out on our opener of deer season with my Shelton. This was my inaugural trip taking a hill style longbow which had its ups and downs. I headed out to an area I hunt regularly on public land that has proven to have great success every year. The paint the picture for you guys, to my south is a crp field that is overgrown with cottonwood saplings so dense light barely gets through which makes it the mother of all bedding areas. To the north is a bean field and where I hunt is a 10 yard deep strip of trees that separates the 2 fields. Now this treeline is made up of massive oak trees too big to use my climber and a couple maple trees that split multiple ways about 15 feet up that I usually climb up in and sit in the crook of the branches. I've hunted in the past out of the maples with my shorter recurves and r/d longbows. After climbing into 3 of the trees I found I would not be able to make a shot into the tight shooting lanes with the longer bow, I even tried more cant to the bow but that just created other limb clearance problems amongst the branches. So scratch that area off the list as ground hunting just isn't a great idea with the lack of underbrush.
So onto the next area I went, where I shot at a doe last year with my recurve I had but biffed the shot. I got out to my spot and found my little natural blind which offered about the only available shooting spot upon the trail/Creek crossing. No this spot is a piece of limerock situated right in between 2 cedar trees. This is when I found issue number 2 for the day. Where I sit the ground in front of me raises up so I can't hold the bow vertical without the bottom limb tip hitting something and once again when casting the bow to clear the ground then my limbs are within an inch at best of the 2 cedar trunks.
I've come to the conclusion I am definitely going to have to reevaluate my hunting locations and all my spots are really more suited to shorter bows.