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Buck Hunter 1 08-10-2008 07:21 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
It is interesting that you place blame on the Xbow companies for enriching our huinting experiences, yet your Compound manufacturers did the same to get the PAPGC to allow Compunds. Secondly. Xbow manufacturers are at these PGC meetings, where are your Compound manufacturers?? Are the y beoing vocal as well?Where are the herds of Anti Xbow people? I have seen nothing anti in the poles being run, only negativity from organized compound clubswho DO NOT have the majority. Your stories of I was in the woods and saw to gys carrying Xbows and they were illegal blah blah sound like the old gosiip monger of the neighboir hood. You never tracked a stuck deer???? Once there stuck it is a matter of woodsmanship not shooting, and guess what that comes freom experience. Maybe if you had gotten out of your tree and explained it is private property, and showed helped them they would become better woodsmen!! but nope, you sat in your tree feeling superiorand let that deer die and meat go to waste! You exeplify the type of hunter that I do not want in the woods. I have seen a couple writers on here that make me scared for our hunting sport. The attitudes and smugness have no place in these times and in the woods. What happened to teach, share the woods make it better for our kids? No you guys spout entitlement, superiority and screw em' I'll let the wounded deer go and the Xbow guys can all go F_ _k themselves.Good luck, that is why PA is letting the PGC ruin your huntingand the Politicianserode your rights!! Because you sat in the tree and didn't get involved in going after the real game.

livbucks 08-10-2008 07:43 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Hey Bud...Were you there?????
IDID SIT IN MY TREE, YES.
I DID TELL THEM THEY WERE TRESPASSING, AND I GOT AN ARGUMENT, NOT AN APOLOGY. LASTLY, I POINTEDTHEM IN THE DIRECTION THE DOE TOOK, AND THEY SAID THEY DIDN'T SEE A HEAVY ENOUGH BLOOD TRAIL, MADE SOME EXCUSES AND LEFT.

LASTLY, I'M NOT MAKING ANYTHING UP. AS A MATTER OF FACT, THEY PARKED THEIR DODGE DURANGO IN THE LANDOWNERS DRIVEWAY AND LEFT THE DOORS WIDE OPEN WHEN THEY LEFT IT. I WAS GOING TO HAVE IT TOWED AS A DESERTED VEHICLE.
I GAVE THEM ALL THE BENEFIT OF DOUBT, BUT AS WAS EXPECTED, THEY DISAPPOINTED ME WITH THEIR ACTIONS.
IT WAS WEEKS LATER I FOUND THE DOE BTW.

BTBowhunter 08-10-2008 09:06 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Gee Greg, I am surprised at you! I cant understand for a minute why you didnt get down and have a little group hug with those tresspassers. After everyone had bonded with the group hug you could have helped them out! Myabe even showed them a few of your honey holes on the property. When they got discouraged with the blood trail you could have been a good host and told them to go on back to their hunt and then taken up their blood trail and maybe found that doe and drug it back to their Durango for them.

You had a chance to be a good ambassador for us compound guys and you blew it! I'm so disappointed with you!

livbucks 08-10-2008 09:22 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Bob, just imagine walking onto a property well before first light, that you have permission to hunt, ,that you grew up in those woods, and watch out for the elderly landowners, and see a Durango sitting with the doors wide open and nobody around. Then you proceed to your stand and see flashlights off in the woods. You go to your stand and after dawns comes, a duo appears under your stand and the scenario I related unfolds.
I was very fair to them. I asked that they finish out their hunt for the day, but please never return. It was after that they abandoned the trailing of the doe and to my complete and utter astonishment, went back to their spots and resumed hunting!!!!
We found out who they were after that, and sent an additional stern message that they never be caught on the property ever again.

Do you know why they were there?? They saw a nice 8-point cross the road there one night and arbitrarily decided to go hunt the property, without a care as to whether they were permitted to do so.

Buck Hunter 1 08-10-2008 09:32 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Oh and now your story changes from the original complaint. Now detail is provided that it wasn't the Xbow as an issue, it was the slob hunters , Bud. Again the old lady gossiping and never get the story out right! BTBowhunter, I thought you were actually working on a good solution but when you side w/ old women who gossip it makes a person wonder........So what is your complaint about the ages old Xbow technology and your fairly new technology Compound bow, or is it someone came into your entitled area?????????? This is laughable , Bud!

livbucks 08-10-2008 09:52 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
I do believe the fact that they were both carrying brand new crossguns has some relevance, yes.
I anticipate this scenario playing out routinely all across the state should they be given unfettered use in Bow and arrow season. If a guy is willing to pay his dues, and get registered in an educational class, then he has some serious forthought to what he is undertaking, andI welcome that.
There are striking differences to how the new hunters coming in approach the sport and what I was taught. What's wrong with teaching these new guys the correct way to go about it?

Buck Hunter 1 08-10-2008 10:41 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Nothing. I do not like tales that have no relevance to the discussion of Xbow hunting and legalization. For every story you tell about a Xbow hunter I will triple it w/ stories of bow hunters. If you all want the hunting sport to grow then you have to baby it and teach, not discriminate and make statements that have no relevance to a dicussion but are geared towards your supposed entitlemant . Fact of it is Xbow will pass, period. Don't blame poor hunting technique, slob hunters or wounded deer that you found in the woods on the Xbow. I agree w/ education on ALL hunting but that is book learning and i can pass a test book in learning. It has no relevance on how i will be in the woods when the examiner isn't around. Is this not taught in Hunter Education and is that not what that class is for? Unless you can give me a bonified reason that you cannot share the woods during bow season w/ other hunters and I will include small gamers, turkey, muzzleloaders and centerfires as is all leagl now, then why not open those woods to all. There is no reason, there is no entitlement, no safety issue nothing except you people w/ the newest technology that want a better chance to kill a deer than me. It's just wrong!

Win.88 08-10-2008 11:23 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Buck Hunter 1.....well said.I'm new on this site and I hear a lot of twisted controversy.I was thinking about not coming here anymore, but nowit is truly becoming amusing.I think I know what to say when I ned a good laugh.

livbucks 08-10-2008 11:25 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
You were seemingly in agreement with Bob and his certification idea, but now that he has shown a little agreement to whatI have said, you suddenly turn on him?
I would ask you then: Do you favor certification, or not?
Don't beat up on him. His views have softened mine to whereI would accept the idea with a certification of some kind. I respect his judgement enough to reconsider amending mine on this issue.

BTBowhunter 08-10-2008 09:13 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Buck Hunter1

I'm sorry but there is not a gentle way to say this. You were way out of line criticizin Greg for the way he handled a couple of tresspassers. He exhibited a huge amount of patience when he tried to help them by telling them where the deer went when he could have simply thrown them off the property. Something many of us would have done immediately. The fact that they had brand new crossbows is a valid point in this discussion.
It's valid because there is a real concern about who will be attracted to the crossbow. Lets face it, killing a deer with anbroadhead is far more challlenging than killing a deer with a bullet.

Lets look at the similarities between a crossbow and a compound or recurve

1 They all kill by the use of a cutting edge causing either hemmorage (bleeding)or a bilateral pneumothroax (collapsed lungs). The shock imparted by an arrow (or bolt) is not a factor in it's killing ability

2 Shot placement is crucial with all weapons propelling a broadhead so knowledge of deer anatomy is far more important than for a gun hunter Many places in a deers body that would be a sure kill with abullet are a recipe for disaster with a broadhead

8[/size]9 Almost all broadhead hits will require some tracking skills
becasue the deer usually runs off

4All of them require that the hunter get relatively close. Yes, the stickbow usually requires that you be even closer but the compound and crossbow have about the same effective range which is somewhere around 10-20% of the effective range of a good deer rifle

So far this could have come from any crossbow proponent trying to get them into archery season right?

Now lets talk about the differences

1 A crossbow does not have to be drawn in the presence of the game
BIG advantage when working closeto avery cautious animal

2 a crossbow is held in the cocked position eliminating the possibility of drawing only to have the deer get behind an obstacle and having to let down and risk exposing yourself to the deer. another advantage over other bows

3 a crossbow is easy to shoot accurately (within its range) without much practice or dedication. another advantage over other bows

4 crossbows are very noisy compared to compounds but not any faster
a disadvantage to the crossbow hunter

OK having said all that, one might think I'm pushing the crossbow but here's the problem as I see it. Hunting with any bow, vertical or horzontal requires a significantly higher degree of dedication and commitment for one to hunt responsibly with any of these weapons.

I and many other would argue that the Pennsylvania hunters that are willing to put forth the commitment and dedication required to hunt with any of the aboveare already hunting with the compound and long and and recurve bows that are now legal.

So who would go for the crossbow and why? The physically challenged already have the crossbow. So who else? It is valid to be worried that because it is relatively easy to shoot, the crossbow might attract those looking for the easy way into the season. The guy who "doesnt have time to practice a lot" ( translation: WONT MAKE THE TIME) Mandatory meaningful bowhunter education would go a long way toward eliminating this worry.

Gregs story sounds like a pair of the type of guys that we ALL should be worried about. Jerks come in all sizes and shapes and yes there are jerks like that carrying compounds and recurves too. Gregs jerks happened tio be carrying crossbows so it was valid for him to relay the story as it happened. I would argue that mandatory bowhunter ed would have either discouraged the two jerks from ever even buting the crossbows or perhaps started them out better prepared so that the wounded and unrecovered deer situation mightnever have happened.

You need to re read his story what you wrote back to him and ask yourself how you would have handled the situation if those jerks walked in on your hunt. I think if you can be honest with yourself you'll betyping Greg an apology



sproulman 08-10-2008 09:49 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

ORIGINAL: livbucks

Bob, just imagine walking onto a property well before first light, that you have permission to hunt, ,that you grew up in those woods, and watch out for the elderly landowners, and see a Durango sitting with the doors wide open and nobody around. Then you proceed to your stand and see flashlights off in the woods. You go to your stand and after dawns comes, a duo appears under your stand and the scenario I related unfolds.
I was very fair to them. I asked that they finish out their hunt for the day, but please never return. It was after that they abandoned the trailing of the doe and to my complete and utter astonishment, went back to their spots and resumed hunting!!!!
We found out who they were after that, and sent an additional stern message that they never be caught on the property ever again.

Do you know why they were there?? They saw a nice 8-point cross the road there one night and arbitrarily decided to go hunt the property, without a care as to whether they were permitted to do so.
with crossbow,these type of people will do this, they cant do it will a recuve or compound.
now, i dont want to go into this as i have friends over on crossbow topic that asked that i dont tell what i see because it will hurt crossbow hunting .so ,i wont.

i do see a LOT of old FARTS,now dont jump on me, only adding a little humor gettinga doe and some got some real nice bucks last year in archery.

they have time to sit all day while others cant and go to work,so crossbow got them into woods and most gave up archery or never used bow before.

crossbow is getting more hunters into archery season, A LOT MORE.

they are getting a deer,for sure.

Buck Hunter 1 08-11-2008 05:13 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
You want education, get it on the books. It is like the 3 day waiting period for a gun. I shoot multiple types of stringed weapons, I still have to practice, I still have to use woodsmanship and courtesy in the woods. When you start out a story in a discussion about 2 guys w/Xbows you have demonized the weapon not the people pulling the trigger or trigger release. You are demonizing the person behind the sights, whatever. It's the people not the weapon. Greg I assume does not have a clue if these guys practiced or what, he laid smack on the fact that they had Xbows! They were slob hunters, no matter what they carried and that detail did not come out until he restated the incident in his second capped email. No no aplogy because it was not a Xbow faulted incident it was slob hunters and his trying to tie that in w/ the hated Xbows and how they make people crazy in the woods. Please...... So what I can see is Hunters Ed for newcomers and were good to go, no restrictions of hunting dates and bow is a bow is a bow. Good luck w/those new fangled hunting bows, w/all the let off, scopes, sights, whiskers, pulleys titanium and whatever else makes it quicker, quieter and faster than my old Xbow. Before you start berating a hunting type, come w/ the facts not tales of "2 hunters and ?? bow", it affects us all!

BTBowhunter 08-11-2008 05:42 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

Good luck w/those new fangled hunting bows, w/all the let off, scopes, sights, whiskers, pulleys titanium and whatever else makes it quicker, quieter and faster than my old Xbow. Before you start berating a hunting type, come w/ the facts not tales of "2 hunters and ?? bow", it affects us all!

So what is your complaint about the ages old Xbow technology and your fairly new technology Compound bow, or is it someone came into your entitled area?????????? This is laughable , Bud!
I forgot to address this earlier. You are trying to portray the crossbow as a weapon that is somehow more traditional than a compound when indeed todays crossbows utilize all the technological advances of todays compounds.You've tried to make the pointthat a compound is no longer a primitive weapon. Well, neither is the crossbow and for that matter, even todays recurves and longbows are light years ahead of their forefathers in terms of efficiency, designand performance.

Buck Hunter 1 08-11-2008 06:02 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Ha-ha-ha you copounders never quit do ya? See ya in the woods!

BTBowhunter 08-11-2008 06:39 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

ORIGINAL: Buck Hunter 1

You want education, get it on the books. It is like the 3 day waiting period for a gun. I shoot multiple types of stringed weapons, I still have to practice, I still have to use woodsmanship and courtesy in the woods. When you start out a story in a discussion about 2 guys w/Xbows you have demonized the weapon not the people pulling the trigger or trigger release. You are demonizing the person behind the sights, whatever. It's the people not the weapon. Greg I assume does not have a clue if these guys practiced or what, he laid smack on the fact that they had Xbows! They were slob hunters, no matter what they carried and that detail did not come out until he restated the incident in his second capped email. No no aplogy because it was not a Xbow faulted incident it was slob hunters and his trying to tie that in w/ the hated Xbows and how they make people crazy in the woods. Please...... So what I can see is Hunters Ed for newcomers and were good to go, no restrictions of hunting dates and bow is a bow is a bow. Good luck w/those new fangled hunting bows, w/all the let off, scopes, sights, whiskers, pulleys titanium and whatever else makes it quicker, quieter and faster than my old Xbow. Before you start berating a hunting type, come w/ the facts not tales of "2 hunters and ?? bow", it affects us all!
I have known Greg long enough here to say that I he is a fair and open minded guy. His story wasnt meant to attack the crossbow but to point out the worry that many of us share. That wholesale legalization of the crossbow could attract a substantial number of one day wonders or weekend warriors and damage a season that many of us worked very hard to get. I'm not convinced that the crossbow will cause a massive deer kill but I'm also not convinced that it will have no effect ina state where any additional hunting pressure from any o*****up will necessarily cause decreased opportunities for someone somewhere.

I'm leaning toward continuing toresist the crossbow until sufficient studies regarding their effect are done on the areas where they ae now legal and until we have mandatory, meaningful bowhunter education requirements in place.

livbucks 08-11-2008 11:06 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Devices that hold aBOW at full draw are illegal in PA.
Now they want to permit a tool that not only holds the draw, but also shoulders as a gun and fires by trigger like a gun.
All it is, seems to me, is a big marketing ploy by the manufacturers.
I don't see a groundswell of demand by the hunters that I speak to.
I wouldn't be surprised if the vocal proponents on many of these forums were company reps.

Buck Hunter 1 08-11-2008 11:25 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
Nope, not a rep only wished i was. Could get to shoot the latest and greatest. Just a hard hunter who stinks like fox piss or skunk piss, and has a wife who won't get in the truck cause it smells like whe dows't know what. But Livucks, I hate it when people do anything possible to do what I don't know what w/ vague words. BTB stuck a good word for you, but generalized comments w/ no proof like this get me riled again. Good Luck to you and the minority, I'm tuning the Xbow and leaving the Compound in the safe this year. Anyone know of any Xbow organizations I can get my family and friends to join let me know. This is the kind of person your going to have to deal w/ in getting the right to hunt Xbow in 2008 latest 2009. BTB want me to apologize again for his generalization?

bluebird2 08-11-2008 11:25 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
BT just reminded me that bowhunters have left themselves wide open for the introduction of X-bows by harvesting 25 % of the buck harvest but only 16% of the antlerless harvest. The preseason antlered to antlerless ration is around 1 antlered to 3 or 4 antlerless ,yet archers only harvested 6050 more antlerless than buck. That means ,on average they passed on one heck of a lot of antlerless deer while waiting for that AR legal buck.

livbucks 08-11-2008 01:18 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

ORIGINAL: bluebird2

BT just reminded me that bowhunters have left themselves wide open for the introduction of X-bows by harvesting 25 % of the buck harvest but only 16% of the antlerless harvest. The preseason antlered to antlerless ration is around 1 antlered to 3 or 4 antlerless ,yet archers only harvested 6050 more antlerless than buck. That means ,on average they passed on one heck of a lot of antlerless deer while waiting for that AR legal buck.
40% or so being fawns/buttons, you betcha. Do you include the BB's in your antlerless total?
Refigure your numbers and get that info to me, OK?

You don't figure them buttons as does in your b/d ratio, do you?

livbucks 08-11-2008 01:26 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

Anyone know of any Xbow organizations I can get my family and friends to join let me know.
Just by the very nature of the thing, I think you'd have a very hard time finding one.
That is just my opinion though.

bluebird2 08-11-2008 01:40 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

40% or so being buttons, you betcha
I see you are just making up numbers again to support your agenda. If you knew as much as you think you know, you would know that 44% of the antlerless deer harvested are fawns,and on average 22% are BB.

Please note, my post says nothing about the B/D ratio.

livbucks 08-11-2008 02:20 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
I did goof, I'll give you that.
I meant fawns/BB.
Sorry.

bluebird2 08-11-2008 03:43 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
The fawn/BB ratio is around 2:1.

BTBowhunter 08-11-2008 06:51 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

ORIGINAL: bluebird2

The fawn/BB ratio is around 2:1.
Wong again. A BB is a fawn. Assuming you meant BB's/doe fawns you're still wrong.At birth BB's comprise about 54% of each years new fawn crop

bluebird2 08-11-2008 07:10 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 


ORIGINAL: BTBowhunter


ORIGINAL: bluebird2

The fawn/BB ratio is around 2:1.
Wong again. A BB is a fawn. Assuming you meant BB's/doe fawns you're still wrong. At birth BB's comprise about 54% of each years new fawn crop
Nice try , but you are barking up the wrong tree. Livbucks posed the ratio of fawns /Bb not me. My reply was simply to demonstrate Livbucks didn't know what he was talking about.

In 2007 the PGC said 24% of the fawns harvested were BB. but in previous years the PGC stated that the fawn harvest was equally split between males and females. So were the hunters in 2007 targeting BB, or is the 24% harvest rate just an anomaly?

BTBowhunter 08-11-2008 07:18 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

In 2007 the PGC said 24% of the fawns harvested were BB. but in previous years the PGC stated that the fawn harvest was equally split between males and females. So were the hunters in 2007 targeting BB, or is the 24% harvest rate just an anomaly?
One way or another you are wrong again!

Quoted above from your post you said 24% of the fawn harvest was BB's
Based on that statement hunters would have been protecting the BB's

bluebird2 08-11-2008 07:38 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

Quoted above from your post you said 24% of the fawn harvest was BB's
Based on that statement hunters would have been protecting the BB's
Your post makes no sense whatsoever. Try re-reading my post and try again.

livbucks 08-11-2008 07:48 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

At birth BB's comprise about 54% of each years new fawn crop
I was going to say that, but he comes across with such authority, that he even made me believe he was correct.


bluebird2 08-11-2008 07:55 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
What difference does it make if BB are 54% of the fawns or 50% of the fawns? The fact remains that BB will always comprise 22-24% of the antlerless harvest.

BTBowhunter 08-11-2008 07:56 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

ORIGINAL: livbucks


At birth BB's comprise about 54% of each years new fawn crop
I was going to say that, but he comes across with such authority, that he even made me believe he was correct.

I understand Greg. And therein lies the reason we need to continue correctin the spin doctors, liars and kooks here. It does get tiresome when we get all three rolled into one

BTBowhunter 08-11-2008 07:59 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

ORIGINAL: bluebird2

What difference does it make if BB are 54% of the fawns or 50% of the fawns? The fact remains that BB will always comprise 22-24% of the antlerless harvest.
You just said it was 24% of the FAWN harvest in a previous post.

Which are you now claiming to be true?


livbucks 08-11-2008 08:15 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
My apologies to Deaddeer, for hijacking his hijacking of this thread, but here is a link to the war strategy of the people pushing for full inclusion:
http://www.huntingnet.com/forum/tm.aspx?m=2929407

livbucks 08-11-2008 08:20 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
I like this one:

MYTH: Crossbows are too easy to shoot.

FACT: Experienced rifle shooters can expect to quickly achieve tight arrow groups on targets up to forty yards (the effective hunting range of a crossbow). Is that bad? Isn’t accurate shot placement the goal of all ethical hunting? Does the difficulty of shooting a bow accurately deter people from participating in bowhunting? However, to be successful, a crossbow hunter must master all skills and tactics common to bowhunting.
Sounds like the myth is so VERY true, from his own mouth. But he says it in a way that makes it sound like a positive.
How Clinton-esque!

livbucks 08-11-2008 08:24 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

FACT: Experienced rifle shooters can expect to quickly achieve tight arrow groups on targets up to forty yards
They try to diminish the relevance of a crossgun to a gun, but he equates the shooting of one to that of a rifle, in method and ease.

livbucks 08-11-2008 08:25 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

tight arrow groups
Even calls the bolts "arrows".
This is slick!

BTBowhunter 08-11-2008 08:30 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
It's also disturbing that half the posts in that thread are from a crossbow rep.

Trying once again to be fair and open minded, I really would like to see any data collected by the PGC regarding crossbow numbers and success rates in 2B. I think I'llemail a friend that I met from here that is inside the PGC if any such data has been compiled and reviewed

livbucks 08-11-2008 08:31 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
I really think I stumbled onto something here. Look at some of the crossgun proponents' profiles here, and then see where one of the the leading manufacturers of crossbows is from. Ohio keeps popping up. I wonder why??

livbucks 08-11-2008 08:33 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 
So, do we want an out of state company manipulating our traditions and game management for their own profit motives??


livbucks 08-11-2008 08:44 PM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

Trying once again to be fair and open minded, I really would like to see any data collected by the PGC regarding crossbow numbers and success rates in 2B. I think I'llemail a friend that I met from here that is inside the PGC if any such data has been compiled and reviewed
And because I too am open minded, I took your queue and softened my stance to where I would accept the inclusion with some sort of certification. I start to feel bad, because I think of all hunters as one group, and want to welcome all to the sport. Then I see things that look dirty, and I feel like I'm being fooled. I just want the decisions to be based on diligent forthought as to our sport and the animal, not the hidden agenda and profit motives of marketing executives. You hit the nail on the head with that, way back in the beginning of this thread.

bluebird2 08-12-2008 04:20 AM

RE: Crossbows introduced for regular archery season in PA
 

You just said it was 24% of the FAWN harvest in a previous post.
In 2007 the PGC said that BB were 24% of the antlerless harvest, not that 24% of the fawns harvested were BB.


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