Kevin Dill
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2014
- Messages
- 3,158
You've got good accuracy with your hunting gear. You're getting good, desirable animals in to close range. You can smack a beer can at 20 yards but something seems to go haywire with animals at the moment of truth. What is it?
To attack my own question.....
I have hunted with a number of guys who were basically outstanding killers, when it came down to a killing time. If they decided an animal was to be taken, and if that animal got inside their effective range....dead critter. We've all talked about why some guys get it done with steady regularity and dependability. I feel confident to say none of them are/were natural killers. They all developed their abilities to make it count when the opportunity arrived. And here's what I think most of it boils down to:
1. Demonstrable and repeatable accuracy with the bow. Confidence is an element of accuracy. The better your accuracy, the more you believe in your ability to make a killing shot. And that belief then becomes....
2. Confidence. When the hunter believes 100% in his abilities to get it done, there's no creeping doubt when the bow is raised. Nothing beats knowing you've got this....no worries.
3. Managing emotions and thoughts. I and the majority of the successful hunters I know seem to have one thing generally in common. Once we determine an animal is worth killing, we tend to focus 150% on bringing it to fruition. Emotion and distractions are put aside. Nothing matters except the animal's actions and our final preparation. When the moment arrives that I know a shot is imminent, I find myself 'chilling down' and going into a total predatory state of mind. And though this tends to feel very instinctive to me, it's really just how I've developed over many years. My head used to be full of 'what ifs?' a long time back...and those are the things that blow your focus.