Recovering from an awful hunting season

cbang65

Member
Joined
Jul 24, 2017
Messages
23
Location
Blissfield, Michigan
Hi All,

I’m in need of some advice. This season has been an especially difficult one for me in terms of failure.

Deer season here in Michigan kicked off 10/1, and it’s been a rough go from the start. Opening weekend of bow I missed a doe, the following day made a poor below-my-stand-downward shot on another doe, and was unable to recover both the doe and my arrow.

The following day I got a (what I thought was a good) shot on a nice 8pt, slightly quartering-to at about 20 yards. Tracked him 470 yards on decent blood, eventually he crossed onto a different property and I was unable to track further.

Thinking my fixed blade G5 Montecs may not be creating enough damage, I swapped to a Rage head that I’ve had good success with before. Some weeks later I successfully harvested a small doe. The next day, I missed a 2nd doe broadside at maybe 35 yards.

Frustrated, I hung up the archery equipment and waited for gun season. Yesterday morning I had a 60 yard shot on a doe with my rifled 12 gauge. Missed again. Took the gun to the range, adjusted the scope, and went back out the same evening.

Again, I had an opportunity at a doe at maybe 45-50 yards. Took 2 shots, both with the doe standing still, and missed both times.

Now I’ve been known to have pretty strong buck (or doe) fever. But not so much that I can’t make a clean 50 yard shot on a stationary target.

In seasons past I’ve harvested a total of 5 deer, all with archery equipment, and have only ever lost 1 animal and missed 1 animal in the 7 years prior.

That leaves me at a loss. I know the issue is most certainly user error, and I’ve decided that I am probably done with the season as of now.

But what do I do next? Part of me feels that hunting is a part of my identity, and that I should stay focused and try to improve. Yet another part of me feels that it is irresponsible to continue going out in the field to possibly wound animals and ruin others hunts (I share a permission property with 3 other hunters). That, and obviously failure generally sucks.

Any advice, or similar stories, and how you navigated them would be greatly appreciated.
 
If it isn't working how it should, the ethical thing to do is move back to practice, practice and more practice. There is absolutely no shame in taking a season to fine tune yourself as a hunter. People get way too wrapped up in the thought that they have to be out all the time. We owe it to the critters we chase and kill to be the best hunter we can be. It absolutely sucks to lose or wound an animal, but it happens. Learn from it and move on, which is precisely what it sounds like you are doing.

There's still a ton of season left between general, muzzy and late antlerless. Take a week or so and get your fundamentals back in line and don't worry about the field until your confidence is back. You got this!
 
If it isn't working how it should, the ethical thing to do is move back to practice, practice and more practice. There is absolutely no shame in taking a season to fine tune yourself as a hunter. People get way too wrapped up in the thought that they have to be out all the time. We owe it to the critters we chase and kill to be the best hunter we can be. It absolutely sucks to lose or wound an animal, but it happens. Learn from it and move on, which is precisely what it sounds like you are doing.

There's still a ton of season left between general, muzzy and late antlerless. Take a week or so and get your fundamentals back in line and don't worry about the field until your confidence is back. You got this!
Thanks Ben. I’ve been kicking around that idea as well. In truth, I haven’t practiced to the degree that I should with my bow; maybe a dozen shots once or twice a week in the couple months leading up to the season.

Certainly going to change that. We’ll see if my feelings change later on as far as confidence.
 
Practice, practice, practice.

I have a cousin and uncle who aren't good shots. That being said they put no effort into improving. Never stop practicing and trying to improve. I personally make it a high priority to practice and stay confident in my shooting abilities. I don't practice as much as I should, but I typically start shooting in August or late July and shoot through hunting season.

When it comes to rifle hunting, I shoot at least once before going out on a hunt. Usually more than once, but at a minimum, I'll confirm my zero hasn't shifted in travel. Once that has been confirmed, I'll take another shot out to 800 (or as far as the area allows) and make any adjustments to my ballistics if needed.

Wounding an animal is a terrible feeling. I practice to avoid that feeling at all costs. Take time off if needed and practice.
 
Practice in all its forms. Squirrel hunting, range time, and dry fire practice. All of it is very important. The squirrel hunting should help you calm yourself before taking a shot. Range time for being able to gauge how you're actually shooting. Dry fire time build muscle memory that doesn't include flinching.
 

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