[QUOTE="Honyock, post: 3958994, member:
Since they are inherently more accurate, there are also less wounded/never recovered deer with crossbows than compound bows. Unfortunately, not all longbow hunters spend the time to become proficient with their bows. They're the "close enough" crowd ("I hit a paper plate at 20 yards") that would be better off with a crossbow in their hands instead of gut shooting a deer they never find. The numbers show that since 2011 (the year before crossbows were legalized in Indianna) the actual harvest numbers in Indiana have went down from 129,018 in 2011-12 to 121,282 in 2023-24 so I don't think crossbows are the issue.
I personally think that giving hunters more opportunities to hunt contributes to less young deer getting shot. Instead of "I've only got a week to kill my buck" and shoots the first forky he sees so he can say "I got my buck", maybe he's more selective because he knows that he's got the time to find a better buck.[/QUOTE]
I somewhat agree about crossbows wounding less deer, because yes when used ethically you’re right, but that’s not always the case. Crossbows vary so much between models. Guys with their $200 killer instinct think they can match the performance of a $2,000 raven. When I shot my doe with a raven, it was on a tripod, rock steady, and that bolt arrived before she knew anything was up, but as I’ve matured I can probably agree I wouldn’t take the shot, although the equipment proved capable. However, within the last 5 years I have had 2 bucks that I know of be injured by neighbors using crossbows. But I know wounding deer is a part of hunting and nobody ever tries to do it on purpose and those cases are the exceptions. Ultimately it comes back to the hunter staying within the specific weapons capabilities while trying to minimize mistakes.
Those harvest numbers are interesting and I think they could be interpreted a couple different ways. Some things that come to my mind…
1. When did IN move to only online checkin? I think (know several) people do not check their deer in and process them their self. The old system of having to go to a check station and obtain your metal tag probably helped keep people more honest. Plus I miss getting to see all the deer shot in the area
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2. Harvest could be reducing because our deer numbers are reducing because of how effective we have become with our weapons combined with some death causing diseases such as ehd. Maybe people are concerned and are showing some restraint and not filling every tag they possibly can.
3. Crossbows have allowed “gun hunters” to now hunt for months rather than weeks. People who used to only hunt 1 property have now branched out to obtain more permission or leases since they have more time to hunt, and their harvests (say 1 buck and 2 does) are spread across multiple properties rather than shooting those 3 deer on just their one property, while somebody else would have been hunting the now leased or permission property and harvesting deer there. Extrapolate that across the state and I could see how it would lead to a reduction in harvest numbers.
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