Sunday, June 11, 2017

Trophy Prospective

What was the first thing someone said to you the last time you were successful on a hunt? These days it seems that "great job" and "congratulations" have been replaced by "what did he score?" Where are the trail cam pics?" And my personal favorite, "you should see the one I shot!" I think some hunters have lost perspective of what hunting is truly about.

So.. What is hunting truly about? Well that's a fairly loaded question and has alot of different answers depending on who you ask. For me, hunting started out as a family endeavor and a way to fill the freezer. I will admit that as a young hunter I got caught up in wanting to shoot the biggest buck in school but as time passed my "trophy prospective" changed. It became more about setting a goal and achieving it. I realized that once I decided to harvest a certain animal my heart pounded and my knees quaked above my boots. I get the same adrenaline rush from a doe as I do with a monster buck! "Any animal with a bow is a trophy." This statement may seem a bit cliche but for me it is how I feel. Don't get me wrong if a monster bull is standing next to a cow, no doubt I'm shooting the bull, but if the cow is at 20 yards and the bull is at 50, and I know I'm about to be busted.. You can bet that an arrow will be on its way! And I will not regret it one bit.

At the end of the day you have to ask yourself what hunting means to you and what your trophy prospective is but whatever you do don't take away someone else's accomplishment just because their goals may be different than yours!


Saturday, March 18, 2017

Work hard and play harder!

I have given alot of thought to what my first contribution to this blog would be and I think I will start with a thank you. First to Nathan Bailey for inviting me to contribute and second to anyone reading this, like me you are never satisfied with what you know about bowhunting. You spend your spare time reading hunting magazines, listening to podcasts about gear and tactics, or reading hunting blogs. This thirst for knowledge is what sets us apart from other hunters when fall roles back around. I never stop planning, researching, or preparing for my next hunt, sounds corny but it is the force that drives me. There is no off season for people like us!

 As I lay here after a 12 hour day at work, knowing full well I have an even longer one tomorrow, I still can't fall asleep without reflecting on my most recent hunting applications or reviewing some new gear. I work hard so that I can play hard. I get alot of grief about how much time I get to spend in the field each year or about some of the amazing hunts I've had the privilege to go on. It's all about your priorities, you have to set long term goals and then see them through. Alot of my more expensive hunting adventures were planned 1,2, even 3 years in advance. Makes saving for them easier and gives you motivation to put long days in at work. It also gives you the opportunity to research the country, the animal, and the outfitter if one is required. If you budget your money and work some extra hours during the "off season" you will be surprised what you can afford to do.

This may not have been the most informative post you have ever read but it's late and I'm tired so bare with me! If you take one thing away from this, it should be that the only thing standing between you and the hunt of a lifetime is a little hard work and the best time to start planning is right now! Good luck and happy hunting!

Jake Downs

Monday, March 13, 2017

The Atypical Tree Hugger


Hello,

Let me first introduce myself. My name is Harmon Carson. I am from a speck of earth in northwest Louisiana known as Elm Grove. I grew up on a farm 20 miles from the nearest suburbia; completely surrounded by woods, and bayous, and all the flora and fauna a country-hearted boy could stand to grow up on. Needless to say, I became an avid outdoorsman at an early age.

My dad taught me to hunt very early on and I took to it like a stank on a boar hog. It wasn’t long before I was reeking havoc on any and all local wildlife. Unlike most boys of my age who were getting arthritis in their thumbs by age 9 due to video gaming, I spent more time in the woods than I did at my own home. My poor mother can attest to this fact from days of my leaving close to daybreak with fishing pole in one hand and a trusted gun in the other hand, not to be seen for hours on end until she worriedly would honk the car horn for me to come home and check in. During these long days alone in the woods, I became ever increasingly more knowledgeable of local animal life and behavior. I did this, much out of curiosity of the simplicity of life in the wild, and also out of a desire to become a better hunter/woodsman. If I knew animals, I could know where to find them, how to outsmart them, and how to do this well.

I shall take a small break here to introduce a role model that impacted my life early on and who, to this day, I still find myself longing to become more like. This is not the typical “hero” of a father, or grand dad that most young boys want to be (not to say that my own father and grandpa, did not and do not hold such standing with me, for they certainly do) however, this hero was introduced to me through Walt Disney…This hero’s name is Robin Hood. I remember being enchanted by the wiley, cunning archer who always outfoxed and overcame those who opposed him through sheer skill of stick and string and through a simplistic common sense knowledge that came from experience alone. I wanted to be this guy. I wanted to be Robin Hood. I remember in my boyhood fantasies, disappearing into the woods before my house (my own personal Sherwood Forest) searching for the perfect sapling that would soon be cut down, whittled and fashioned to become my mystical bow. The string, of course, was stolen from among my mother’s sewing kit. Once I had my trusty bow in hand and a quiver of arrows I had devised from young tree branches, I was ready for battle. I conquered every hay bale army and woodpile castle I came across. Yes, I was the embodiment of Robin Hood. Fierce, skillful, cunning….

This boyhood desire to become a skillful archer like the Sherwood Prince, quickly escalated as I was given a real bow and arrows from my dad. To be honest, I do not remember when I was first given a bow. I only remember having/shooting a bow for as far back as I can remember. In fact, there are pictures of me at age 3 sleeping with a bow in my hands. Were my parents too lenient in this? Nonsense. They were making dreams come true. My skill as an archer and passion for the sport grew every day, and I changed from one bow to the next I as I progressively became stronger and outgrew the bows of my childhood. When I turned 12, I was given a compound bow with which I could hunt. I practiced, as usual, religiously.. But not with the imagination of my former self, with visions of charging armies and armored castles to defeat. I envisioned the white-tailed deer I had spent so much time studying in all of my early woodland adventures. Here.. at age 12.. I became a bowhunter..a different type of “tree hugger”.

Most southern bowhunters hunt from tree stands hung hidden among the branches of a tree, 20ft off the ground, to give ample natural camouflage to disguise the waiting hunter. I was no different. I learned to hunt from a tree in the beginning. Determining the best ambush location after studying the game and surrounding area. Sitting in wait, far above the forest floor, in a stand that hugged the trunk of a giant oak and anticipating what wildlife would be observed whether deer, squirrel, turkey, or wild hog. After a very few encounters while on the bow stand, I learned a valuable and intriguing concept.. Bowhunters are not merely spectators of the world given to us by our Lord and Maker. We are partakers in the dance He has choreographed among flora and fauna. Bow hunting is an intimate sport, in which skill, cunning, knowledge, and a very healthy respect come together to portray a beautiful masterpiece we have all been granted a chance to be apart of. In my long hours high in the gnarly, twisted limbs of ancient oaks, I came to a realization that bowhunters are a blessed group.. privy to subtle nuances Mother Nature has to offer, if we will only take the time to observe, drink up, and enjoy.

My dad has been hunting Colorado for over 30yrs and I have been privileged to tag along nearly every year since the age of two. These annual hunting trips were our family vacation. You must be 12yrs old to legally bowhunt in Colorado, so until I reached that golden age, I spent the days hunting flies, and grasshoppers with my slingshot and blowgun, all the while anticipating dad’s return to camp that hopefully led to me following a bloodtrail with him through the mountains to an arrowed mule deer. My first bowhunt at the age of 12 was for mule deer in Colorado. I killed my first deer, a Louisiana whitetail, at the age of 13 and by 15 I already had numerous deer and a young bull elk under my belt with a bow. The last year I ever carried a gun to the woods for big game was the year I turned 16. Eight years of hunting strictly with my compound bow ensued, but the desire to get back to my Robin Hood roots became ever stronger. I made the switch to hunt with a traditional barebow in the 2011. My first year hunting with a recurve I killed a mule deer buck in Colorado and came back to the bayou state where I killed a nice whitetail buck, a doe, and a hog. I would tell anyone who’s looking to start hunting with a barebow, to first learn the bow, but do not neglect learning your target animal. My success with tradgear came due to the years prior where I spent studying the animals and learning to hunt them on their terms with a compound bow. Regardless of your tool, you must learn to hunt and to do that you must learn the animals.

Over the years, I did learn animals..and learned them well. Today, I still spend every spare minute I can squeeze out of a day, deep in the woods trying to learn everything there is to be offered by the world around me. This desire in me for wild places and wild animals has pushed me to hunt in numerous states chasing an array of different species. These long, silent, peaceful hours spent in the most natural theater offered to man, open up a world of creativity, pleasures, thoughts, and inward reflections that few people take time to enjoy and even fewer will take the time to share. With my contributions to this blog, I hope to change that. With each penned, or in this case.. typed word, I hope to open a whole new world and offer a glimpse of views on things that will hopefully be different than the average man brings before you. I hope to bring you creativity, thoughts, and reflections from the heart of a bowhunter.
I can't remember a time when I didn't have a bow. 
My first bowkill at age 13.
My first elk at the age of 15.


Louisiana whitetail and last compound bow kill
My first traditional bow kill-A Colorado Muley
Public land Colorado 6x6 with a recurve
285lb wild boar stalked and shot at 12yds
173in Louisiana whitetail

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Spectrum


As of late, there has been a lot of talk between compound shooters, gap shooters and instinctive shooters as to what is archery. The intention of this blog isn’t to try to define what form of hunting is “Barebow” or set the standard from which everyone else has to compare their style to, rather we are here to embrace the differences within the spectrum that the barebow brings.  I honor and respect the commitment of the hunter that only shoots a bow that was crafted with his hands, while at the same time enjoy the precision of a machined aluminum, and carbon ilf bows. There is a freedom within the Barebow community. Archers, who love to watch the arch of an arrow as they are punching foam at 60 yards to ensure they will have the confidence to make a 40 yard shot under pressure, are as free as the person who limits themselves to 25 yard shot , and prides themselves to get as close to that animal as possible. The term Barebow encompasses both spectrums and everything in between. I believe that all of us who have chosen to hunt with a Barebow can learn from one another. The gap shooter has something to share with the instinctive crowd and the instinctive crowd has something to share with the gap shooters. Rather than using these techniques to divide us, we should relish in the diversity and gain from other perspectives.

I have asked people that are at both ends of the Barebow hunting spectrum to consider contributing to this blog, as our goal here is to learn. In this blog we will visit points along the whole spectrum of the Barebow Hunter, and by doing so gain valuable insight regardless of where we are in the barebow world. So sit back, enjoy, learn and contribute. If your new to the Barebow Hunting Life Welcome! We are glad to have you here, and there is no need to think you have nothing to add to the community because you shoot a compound. If your interested in Barbow Hunting you are a part of the community.
  Thanks For stopping by…. Nate Bailey

Untamed

Most of you have probably seen this, but its so good that its worth seeing again! For those of you who haven't seen it...your in for a treat. Get out the Jerky and enjoy!


Monday, February 27, 2017

Welcome

Barebow Bull!

Welcome to the Barebow Hunter Blog. All of us who write here celebrate the freedom that the barebow offers. Its simplicity forces us to hone the human spirit rather than equipment. For eons the simple stick and string provided food, protection, and sport. Through hard work and patients we choose the ancient of ways to fill our table. We recognize that all of us are apprentices to those that have gone before and we realize that the knowledge gained is not our own, but that of an ancient fraternity that is as old of mankind itself. This knowledge calls us to the responsibility of sharing it. That’s what this blog is all about…Barebow knowledge that transcends time…Join us as we discuss this primeval marshal art …join us as Barebow Hunters!