ORIGINAL: SteveBNy
From another website by permissiom of the poster.
[blockquote]quote:
Is a crossbow a bow?
In the majority of the world the answer would be yes, they are *archery equipment.*
Only in the United States do you get some bowhunters and bowhunting organizations that don't think that. Of course they are "protecting their own".
THE NAA - the OLDEST archery organization have recognized crossbows for about 60 years. The International Bowhunters Organization has had a crossbow division for several years AND growing every year. THE NFAA now recognizes crossbows at its VEGAS championships. Atlantic City had crossbow divisions for years, that shoot was recently acquired by the NFAA, but its crossbow division is several decades old.
The Archery Trade Association and its predecessor, the Archery Manufacturers Organization recognizes crossbows as archery equipment.
So does most retail dealers- almost every shop that sells archery equipment and guns have crossbows in the archery department, not the firearm counter. Go into Bass Pro or Cabelas or ****s and see where the crossbows are kept.
Every archery catalog I get from the retailers has crossbows in it. Bow and Arrow Magazine carries crossbow advertising.
According to the Internal Revenue Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and all state wildlife agencies, crossbows are archery equipment:
- Crossbows and accessories that attach to crossbows as well as crossbow arrows are defined in the Internal Revenue Code that pertains to the archery excise tax.
- The US Fish & Wildlife Service receives the archery excise tax funds - of which about 10% are from crossbows - from the IRS and allocates those dollars to the state wildlife agencies through the Pittman Robertson program.
- State wildlife agencies receive archery excise tax dollars in amounts determined by a formula that includes the number of licensed hunters (including all those who hunt with crossbows) and the area of the state.
Regardless of what we think, the government treats crossbows like archery equipment.
Now with compound bows - The International Olympic Committee doesn't recognize compounds as archery equipment. The PAN AMERICAN games don't recognize compounds as archery equipment. Neither does some of those ultra elitist traditional heads up the butt groups.
Why have crossbows been welcomed at NAA sanctioned shoots many years longer then the compound bow?
Several European countries dont recognize any archery gear for any hunting purpose. Thanks to bowhunters in England that complained that the crossbows were inhumane After a government study they ended up banning all archery hunting as inhumane.
I don't think we want to head down that path..
A crossbow propels an arrow from the fastly forward moving string powered by a set of bent limbs. The trajectory of the arrow is VERY similar to that of an arrow launched by a compound bow. On the end of that arrow is the same broadhead that is used by any other hunting archer. That arrow kills that deer from lung collapse and blood loss.
Sounds like archery to me.
[/blockquote]
No Corny, this is what I'm referring to, not one persons opinion.