Would you have an nearly identical set up as a backup?

I toyed with this idea for a few years after i got my Vertix. Finally restrung my old DXT last year. I shoot it well enough to kill sub 40 yards, but its more of a last resort thing as they feel too different to shoot them interchangeably. I had the thought, i always take a backup rifle when i travel on hunts, why not a bow?
 
I’d add a rangefinder to the list that should be backed up. At least I can’t judge distance very well without one.
When I was younger (original bushnell yardage pro I think) I left my rangefinder on the bumper of my pickup when we were shooting and drove off, went back looking but couldn’t find it.

Next morning my brother and I watched 3 bulls sparring around all morning in a meadow, the 2 bigger bulls (nice 5 and average 5 yr old 6 type bull) pushed each other into the back and I was able to keep 2 trees between me and them and made a quick stalk, only moving when they were locked up

Got over there clean and in the short groomed looking grass in this meadow, I was unsure of yardage, guessed 30 and bounced my fletchings off his brisket.. he mule kicked and I thought I heart shot him, my brother did too.

We wait a bit, and I stepped it out and got 41yds and doubt crept in… I start looking for my arrow and find it clean as could be… crap!

That was a long time ago, but I remember that hunt well, still a cool encounter, but that rangefinder I lost the day before would have made a better story.

Usually not a thing on the coast, most of my elk have been top pin, but a rangefinder is still a very valuable tool, and never want to be without one, because the day you don’t have it, you might need it
 
I want to know how many guys have had a bow fail on them in the woods to the point that their hunt would be over if they didn't have a backup?
I ran my bow over with my truck in 2020 after an elk hunt. I had come back a little after dusk and set it down behind my truck to open my topper, and then got distracted. Backed out right over a limb pocket.

I bought a new bow the next day, sent Spot Hogg my sight and they replaced what was broken, borrowed a sight, the rest was fine, and I missed some time broadhead tuning and sighting in. I've only shot one bow as well as the one I ran over, and even though the replacement was the same bow, it was among the worst shooting I have had.
 
I want to know how many guys have had a bow fail on them in the woods to the point that their hunt would be over if they didn't have a backup?

For me that has never happened, but maybe I just don't hunt hard enough. I did cut halfway through a string once with a broadhead one year but still killed a bull with it.

I had a limb split on an elk hunt. Didn’t have a back up at the truck and home was 2500 miles away.

Went to the only open shop within 250 miles, bought the only bow in the place that fit me. Killed a bull the next day.


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I don’t take a back up bow with me on hunts, but I have spare parts, arrows, and range finder. My thought is if my bow is damaged so bad I can’t fix it/tune it ASAP it is going to mess up my hunt anyways (borrow or buy another one that will waste a day or two). Personally I have not had any issues over the years where I needed a back up.

I think being prepared reduces the risk of a failure quite a bit. Now that it has warmed up I am shooting my bow weekly. By mid summer I will replace anything that shows wear (quiver if arrow fitting loosely, strings/cables, rest, release, etc). Prior to the hunt I double check everything.

I think the most important thing is not to do dumb stuff with your bow. I baby mine and make it a priority to make sure I’m not doing something to risk damaging it. I have seen bows dry fired numerous times, derailed from screwing around, damaged due to improper storage during transport, dropped from tree stand, and ran over (don’t sit in in the ground or leaned against a vehicle ever).

Bows can blow up do to poor design features, but I would expect that to happen when I’m shooting daily before season and not the one or two arrows I shoot during my hunt.
 
Yep, primary and back up bow go with me. The back up is an older bow set up similar but not exactly the same. I run a 2 pin slider on my primary and a fixed pin (4) on my secondary. The rests are the same manufacturer but different models. Basically the same though. I have had one hunt before I had a backup where I found my modules were missing screws/bolts. I was able to limp it along. I had one hunt where my primary bow broke 2 weeks before the hunt so the backup was needed. Those are the only two times but I still like having a second bow. I try to shoot both of them on a regular basis.
 
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