Great tips, the best thing though is just practice and practice with good form. After you master that, then shoot in many positions. When hunting often times animals don't approach where we expect them, and sometimes kneeling, or if your shooting behind yourself is good practice. Very wise to know how far you can confidently shoot and make a clean kill. I won't shoot beyond 45ish yards with my recurve, at least not at a living animal. Compound shooters might be capable much further. Knowing your equipment and how well you can use it in many scenarios is key! Good luck or there!
Just saying- there’s no such thing as “ no man’s land “ area between the lungs and spine. Farther back is guts etc. The lungs above the front legs and several inches rearward are against the spine. You’ve got lands and then spine. Those no man’s land hits are high lung or spine. You can hit the lower bone part of the spine without causing paralysis and the deer can run off. There’s several excellent anatomy drawings on TH-cam showing this. And you ARE 100% right in that multiple pin shooters need to know their arrows trajectory very well. Great advice.👍👍
Great tips, the best thing though is just practice and practice with good form. After you master that, then shoot in many positions. When hunting often times animals don't approach where we expect them, and sometimes kneeling, or if your shooting behind yourself is good practice. Very wise to know how far you can confidently shoot and make a clean kill. I won't shoot beyond 45ish yards with my recurve, at least not at a living animal. Compound shooters might be capable much further. Knowing your equipment and how well you can use it in many scenarios is key! Good luck or there!
Just saying- there’s no such thing as “ no man’s land “ area between the lungs and spine. Farther back is guts etc. The lungs above the front legs and several inches rearward are against the spine. You’ve got lands and then spine. Those no man’s land hits are high lung or spine. You can hit the lower bone part of the spine without causing paralysis and the deer can run off. There’s several excellent anatomy drawings on TH-cam showing this. And you ARE 100% right in that multiple pin shooters need to know their arrows trajectory very well. Great advice.👍👍