There are places here that allow you to hunt deer on there property and they wasnt 3k to do it so obviously some will pay that. And some want 300 for pigs but I dont think they charge per head its...
Type: Posts; User: megatexture
There are places here that allow you to hunt deer on there property and they wasnt 3k to do it so obviously some will pay that. And some want 300 for pigs but I dont think they charge per head its...
Mate it is what it is just say it up front its better to say it now then for him to think your all on the same page. Just tell him your thoughts.
I'd bet there aren't any property's that solely...
Any broadhead would have decapitated that bird, my bow will put an arrow 2" in a street sign with a field tip and There are many vids on youtube of people hunting pigs with glowing nocks and you can...
I use polystyrene we use sheets for cladding houses and rendering over 5 sheets glued togeather and it weighs nothing also a 2400x1200x75 sheet is like 30$
Yea you may want to make the serving a little longer and wax the string more and it might hold better also
You can get metal jackets that slide inside the arrow to up the weight as well so it's not just tip heavy.
You should be able to slide the serving then the peep on the string and do as growler said over and over till its in the right spot then re tighten serving close to the peep.
It'll be fine, you will get accustomed to lining it up and averaging the 8mm around your sight with out focusing on it if you know what I mean
Ah that's a shame my local will let you try any bow and have many set up for testing.
couldnt tell ya mate ive got a drop away, can you go to a local bow shop and try both ?
thats what id be doing or even get there opinion whats best
Jeez that's pretty slack mate you can't even hold it level for a photo!
But how good are the fibre optic sights! You can buy little led attachments to light it up also but prob over kill lol ......
Ditch that string, looks like its in bad shape that's for sure. If the string let's go mid draw don't expect to use the bow again.
Fibreglass arrows are the most forgiving and fit any archers budget, I've got both alloy and fibreglass but they are both different weights and put the sights out a little because of this so I mainly...
You would assume any bow that was free would be a bargain!
It's mainly to get your technique consistent so unless you plan to get bow crazy and shoot all the time I'd go the larger as the smaller ones can tend to make it harder to see in low light conditions...