HuntingNet.com Forums

HuntingNet.com Forums (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/)
-   Bowhunting (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/bowhunting-18/)
-   -   How do you controll buck fever?? (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/bowhunting/42817-how-do-you-controll-buck-fever.html)

bobcat 10 11-11-2003 07:33 PM

RE: How do you controll buck fever??
 
i dream that my arrow will fly thru the lungs and then i get ready to shoot and i take a few deep breaths.


go deep hunt hard.;)

davidmil 11-11-2003 07:35 PM

RE: How do you controll buck fever??
 
I really don' t have that problem anymore. When I did I found that by just closing my eyes and taking a couple breaths worked wonders. I don' t have it now because I do a lot of things mentioned above. As soon as I see a deer I start planning the shot scenerio or scenerios really. I start talking to myself, which way is he going, where will he pass, I can shoot here..there and there. I' ll plan where to draw etc etc. I don' t care if the deer is 100 yards away, I start getting ready. I get on my feet if I' m not already. I rest the bottom limb in my bow holster in case I have to freeze for long periods. I look for other deer I might rather shoot or ones that could bust me. As the deer approaches I shift as needed to be in a ready to shoot stance. I make sure my feet are apart and I' m well balanced so I don' t get a shakey leg or something. I stick my butt back against the tree for support or my hip if I' m sideways. I' m going to have to bend a little for the shot anyway. This preloads me. I' m watching the deers actions...is he nervous, in a hurry, looking back etc. I pick a spot the closer he gets. I look away occasionally for other deer. etc etc etc. When I draw it' s " When, do it smoothly, what' s the range, see through the peep, see the spot, I give a last second pause and ask myself " Is this the sight picture I want" .. the shot happens by itself pretty much. See the spot where the arrow hit, follow the deer marking his departure. Then I get nervous.

JeramyK 11-11-2003 08:24 PM

RE: How do you controll buck fever??
 
I' m in the same boat as David on this one. To ge the job done you need to focus and plan your shot. Certainly there are time when things happen fast. You need to be able to think and react quickly or you might miss the shot of a lifetime.

Kyle3 11-11-2003 10:42 PM

RE: How do you controll buck fever??
 
I was taught, aim small miss small. Concentrate on the body itself. Stare down the place you want your arrow to go or concentrate on the small shooting lane you may have. This has worked for me, pick the spot on that big buck next time he walks by to a quarter size on his chest. And I bet your shot will be true.

Kanga 11-11-2003 11:09 PM

RE: How do you controll buck fever??
 

Ausie-guy, you are either doing something wrong or something very right not to have any shakes
HAZCON7

Could have been that I was born and raised on a farm and started hunting with a bow when I was 5.
My first job out of school was a professional kangaroo shooter for 10 years followed by 18 months on the Water Buffalo eradication program in the top end of Australia.
Not to mention the hundreds of feral pigs,goats,foxes and rabbits as well as quite a few fallow deer and red stags I have killed all with bow and arrow over the years.

Maybe I have killed too many animals or I have ice water running through my vains;):D

But untill I moved here nearly 3 years ago I had never heard the saying buck fever or fur fever and that was on a tv show;)

BOWFANATIC 11-12-2003 12:25 AM

RE: How do you controll buck fever??
 
Sounds like some folks are confusing " the adrenaline rush" for buck fever!

Around here " buck fever" is the term we use for the folks who lose all control of bodily functions and common sense at the sight of a buck. Those folks usually go their entire lives without filling their buck tags which depresses them to the point where you' ll find them on a bar stool talking about the big ones that got away.:D

" The adrenaline rush" is easily tamed if you think of it as using it to your advantage! How many times have you been sitting in your stand freezing your arse off when out walks a deer and suddenly the teeth chattering , finger numbing cold is non existant? If you tend to get the knee shakes , just use Davids advice and brace yourself against the tree. While your watching your deer decide when and where you will draw your bow and focus that adrenaline into strength for a nice smooth draw. Then use it to concentrate on a spot and a nice smooth release.

Then after you see your arrow crack through the ribs you can let the adrenaline flow however it wants which usually consists of uncontrollable shakes and crazy crap like high fiving the lord or kissing your bow and crying like a school girl!;)

AKDoug 11-12-2003 01:16 AM

RE: How do you controll buck fever??
 
I' ve been waiting for this topic to come up. Maybe I' ve been just a bit nervous to hear the reactions at my own experience so I' ve never posted it.

As I posted last week I killed my first big game animal with a bow, a caribou. I had missed one the day before, but being nervous or shaky didn' t play into it. I just misjudged the distance and missed clean. The one I killed plays out in slow motion every day since I shot him. I was never nervous, I executed the shot just like I have thousands of time before at my own range and in competition. I picked my spot and muscle memory took over, I don' t even remember talking to myself. It was all about being a predator.....taking in acount the wind, the sun at my back, the reactions of the rest of the herd and my target animal. Not once did I shake. I didn' t even get excited. I felt good about my hit, but my reaction was one of calm. I waited a bit before I began to track the animal and I don' t even remember my heart racing at all. In fact, my biggest concern was the instinctive predator stuff....the wind, the sun, the tracks, the blood. When I found the animal I then got excited....excited about the end of a great hunt, the comradery of my hunting partner, the pride you get from being a hunter and bringing home the bacon (so to speak). Stone cold...that' s all I remember about my feelings as I took the shot.

I' m with Ausie-Guy. I grew up harvesting game, albeit with a rifle. I' ve spent a lifetime in the woods. I raised my own pigs, cows and chickens and butchered them myself. Killing was not new to me. Doing it with a bow was a thrill, but it was still just another killing tool. The real thrill to me was the hunt itself....the spotting of the game, the tracking, the outsmarting of the herd, the ambush, getting close enough to smell the animals and here them crunch through the snow.....something you treestand guys really have to try :D The shot...stone cold.

I' m an adrenaline junky, though. I' m a volunteer firefighter, a volunteer EMT and and avid extreme mountain snowmobiler. Maybe I just get pumped so often that the act of taking an animal doesn' t trigger the adrenaline like my other activities. However, I found extreme joy in bowhunting that I do not in my other activities. The act of being a predator awakens things in people way beyond adrenaline.

Tazman 11-12-2003 04:52 AM

RE: How do you controll buck fever??
 
I have only suffered buck fever once and that was on the biggest deer I ever killed, the problem was all I could see was a massive rack moving through the mountain laurels, lucky for me I recognized the symptoms right away and talked myself down.

David gives some excellent advice, force your self to breath deeply and slowly, mentally force your self to take every step of the shot one step at a time, do not touch your release until everything is right, you are at full draw, you are shooting at a SPOT on the deer and not the whole thing, you are anchored properly and then slowly put your finger on the release finger, double check the sight picture and squeeze that release.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 07:45 AM.


Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.