Nuts
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2025
- Messages
- 139
Different folks have different levels of excitement. For me it has evolved. As a youngster I lost my mind but managed to hold things together enough to take a good shot with (1) major flaw. I constantly rushed it. As I got older I got past that to some extent. I feel that shot rushing is a form of fever so to speak. The flip side is I was quite accurate in that rushed shot but it was still rushed. As time evolved and deer management progressed the initial excitement slowed as antler restrictions made you look longer. Eventually this lead to where I am now. Ice cold veins until after. Then my back throbs, heart pumps and I feel like I shake just a bit. But its after. I often have had to take deep breaths and make sure I am not getting tunnel vision. With a bow you can lose sight of twigs and other things.
I have sat with kids the last couple years and watched gun barrels shake. Its awesome. I was with a 10yr old when he shot his 1st deer last year. It took 4 tries to make a shot. He was losing it. I kept making him step away from the gun which was on a death grip. Deep breath. Take your time. Settle in. There is time. You want the deer on the far left. At the shot the smaller one next to the one on the left dropped. lol. We will work on left, center and right later. Good job. After the shot he was worse. Shaking uncontrollably. Something I will never forget.
So what has your fever experience and development been?
How did you deal with it? For me the biggest thing is once I determine I am going to shoot the animal I am no longer looking at horns and size. Completely block it out and focus on placement
I have sat with kids the last couple years and watched gun barrels shake. Its awesome. I was with a 10yr old when he shot his 1st deer last year. It took 4 tries to make a shot. He was losing it. I kept making him step away from the gun which was on a death grip. Deep breath. Take your time. Settle in. There is time. You want the deer on the far left. At the shot the smaller one next to the one on the left dropped. lol. We will work on left, center and right later. Good job. After the shot he was worse. Shaking uncontrollably. Something I will never forget.
So what has your fever experience and development been?
How did you deal with it? For me the biggest thing is once I determine I am going to shoot the animal I am no longer looking at horns and size. Completely block it out and focus on placement