You know, as a new bow hunter, this comment resinated with me. I decided to bow hunt for many reasons and some of those had to do with the challenge. I think the lines get blurred to the point of grey scale and really, no one is right or wrong. But your comments are appreciated. Thank you.
I have decided to not buy this sight for simple reasons: Cost and deservedness. In my mind, this sight is too expensive. I suspect that we will see more of these and the prices will come down, so I will wait. Also, I cannot go to the wife and justify a $1,000 ($800 for the basic model) since I have such limited experience. I would say that that price range is for the professionals. My other thought is that I really don't deserve this sight since I have not put in my time like kingfisher has. I feel like I need to learn a lot more about bowhunting before I go to that level.
But, I will say this, with the shot that I had last season on a Bull Elk, I would have been successful had I used this sight. That would have been amazing really, a first time bow hunter, laying arrows into a trophy Elk, with a somewhat primitive weapon, in the a very difficult and remote location. It would be like a student driver winning the Indy 500. Doesn't that kinda cheapen the competition/challenge itself?
And then when you take about being true to form. Imagine a fly fisherman using bait at the end of his line? Or self driving cars competing against each other. Where's the competition, the challenge, the struggle?