Outside of a D loop, to me, there is no point in carrying anything else in the field. If you have spare strings, the tune of the bow will change - hopefully only slightly. It needs to be shot and made sure your tune is correct. Will have to sight it in again. Wayyyyyy to risky and time...
My son dropped my Leica 2800.com and broke the glass inside the unit. I bought the rangefinder used off this forum. It still worked, but i didn't trust it. Sent it back to Leica and I had a brand new one on my doorstep no questions asked. Took about 3 months.
The struggle is real, fellas. I've struggled my whole life. I've pretty much accepted I'm just a fat fu** and diet/exercise/weights keeps me less fat than I would be if I didn't do anything at all.
Just saw this yesterday. Good movie. Very informative. Sad. As said above, its not a movie that is to be "enjoyed". Think of its as more of a documentary.
I agree with everything said here. I’ve gotten better the more I do it. It’s very rewarding when you put the time in escouting from across the country then hear bugles from the waypoint you saved once you arrive. I’d say I’ll give a hunt 30-40 hours if escouting throughout the summer.
I've always been told the difference in elevation at the short distances of archery shots is negligible. I live at 750' elevation and my shots under 60 yards have always been spot on at 8,000'.