RE: ISN'T IT AMAZING
elkcrazedfrk, your right I think that unless you are a target shooter there is not need to buy a new bow every year. I have been bowhunting since 1989 and with new Switchback I am buying now it will make my 4th bow that I ever owned. My first bow was used, my parents bought it for me as a B-day present. Two years later, I bought my first brand new bow and I used it for 6 years. Then I bought a new bow in 1997 and have used that up until now, and with my new Switchback I plan on using it for at least 5 or 6 years for sure, hopfully more! I do think that if you go back 5, 6, 7 or so years ago that there is a big difference in technology with bows then and now. But if you own a bow thats only a year or two old, well I don't see much inprovement over them with the latest up to date 05 bows. Take Mathews shooters for an example. Now my brother shoots a Legacy and its a very good bow, a new Outback or a Swithcback might be better but not by much. But I have noticed that a lot of Legacy's and even a few Outbacks are being sold right now by hunters just so they can move on up to a Switchback. Bowhunters have every right to do this if they wish this and I say to each their own. But I for one would never sell my bow, let alone sell it for only half price or less of what it costs brand new. Then turn around and buy a even more expensive top of the line up to date bow. But again I say to each their own, and don't complain about the price because were all at fault. I might only buy a new bow every 5 or more years, but you can bet when I do, that it will be top of the line up to date and I will pay top dollar price too.
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Vegetarian - Old Indian word for lousy hunter.
"The rich... who are content to buy what they have not the skill to get by their own exertions, these are the real enemies of game." -Theodore Rosevelt's Principals of the Hunt
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