Of course the #1 recipe for bagging a deer is to put yourself within your effective range of at least one deer you want during the season. Knowing your hunting area, having stands in proper places, and then getting in and out of them without alerting the herd are all important. After that I think competence with your equipment is key. Today, in fact I began stepping a bit closer to my 3-D targets as I start to eliminate the competition-type shots in favor of bow range only and ethical angle shots. This is a huge difference by the way between my return to recurves and my compound bow. With my compound I would still be shooting 50-60 yards on targets and almost never shooting closer than 30 yards even though 95% of my bowrange shots are less than 20 yards and I've never shot past 33 yards in 45 years of bowhunting. I can't do this with my recurve. I have to really foccus on the real-world ranges and angles. It takes far too many shots at longer ranges to program my eye for those. I make sure when I tune my target arrows (field tips) that they also shoot broadheads in the same place. I only shoot a broadhead pointed arrow now abot once or twice a week because I know they shoot like my field tips and the broadheads are tough on targets and arrows. While I have many up and down shots on my 3-D trail, this week I will build an elevated platform on my deck so I can shoot over the rails (didn't need to do this with my compund). I will place 2-3 targets at 10, 15, and 20 yards from this deck location. The shot will be from about 14-20 feet (my yard is sloped down). When I awake every morning I will warm up my muscles with a String Bow or isometrics (2-3 minutes) and then shoot one arrow at each target from the deck to track my effectiveness. I'll shoot more shots after these 1st ones to perfect my technique. But that first arrow is KEY! I'll make sure some of my shots are taken while sitting. I'll also put up my blind and shoot from it since I intend to share time in tree stands and a ground blind for the first time this deer season. Shooting through the windows of a blind, especially with traditional, sightless equipment, can be very different. I need to practice it to be confident.