He is the son-in-law of a friend, and being young and strong and very competitive, he and some of his buddies decided to settle a macho bet. Testosterone was flowing, and they soon began by pulling 70 pounds.
Hey, no problem, they thought. The next step was to crank each bow to 75 pounds, and measure it on a scale. Everyone sucked the bow back to full draw, and then they raised the draw weight to 80 pounds.
This was possible for two guys, but the others dropped out of the contest. It took considerably more effort. This contest was finally going somewhere. They kicked the draw weight up to 85 pounds, and with a great deal of posturing, each one managed tp reach that plateau but it obviously was very difficult for both of them.
We've come this far, one said, let's take it to 90 pounds. There was a great deal of grunting and groaning as each bow came back to their individual anchor points at that draw weight. Both were red in the face, and agreed now to take the contest upwards, one pound at a time.
A bow hunter can win and lose at the heavier draw-weight game but not this hunter.
One man made it to full draw at 91 pounds. The other man did not. We had a winner and a loser, and both titles went to the same man.
The winner-loser felt something go as a muscle ripped in his shoulder while he took it up that one last pound, and his shoulder hurt all winter and was still sore in the spring. By now, he had cranked his bow down to his usual draw weight of 68 pounds.
But he couldn't pull that much weight now. He was then forced to travel in reverse, and tried it again at 65 pounds, and then 60 pounds, and finally settled in at 55 pounds. It still hurt to draw his bow at that poundage, but over the spring and summer he settled in at that draw weight for good.
It's been about 15 years since the two strong men competed to be the champion at pulling the most weight. He is content now because he doesn't have to crank down his bow for the December bow season, and he has found that 55 pounds is plenty heavy and fast enough to kill a buck while hunting in Michigan's swamps and woods.
Many have an obsession with greater arrow speed.
There seems to be an obsession with more and more arrow speed. Years ago, most bows couldn't shoot 150 feet per second (fps). Many thought an arrow speed of 200 fps was impossible. Ten years ago they felt an arrow speed of 300 fps would never be reached, but it has.
The reality of shooting a bow is that if an arrow travels at 180 fps, and hits a deer at a distance of 20 yards or less, the arrow will hit the animal before it can hear a sound and jump the string or duck under the arrow. So ... is there a need to shoot an arrow any faster?
Of course there is, under certain circumstances. Faster arrow speed means a flatter arrow trajectory. An increase in arrow speed of only 20 fps will allow a person, with the proper skills and considerable practice, to easily kill deer at 30 yards instead of 20. Hunters who travel west to hunt for antelope, elk or mule deer often need to shoot at longer distances, and that is where a faster arrow speed is required to flatten out the arrow flight.
There are still some men who are into heavy poundage on their bows, and who want to reach out and set new personal arrow-speed records. They modify their bows, add an overdraw, shorten their arrow length, and crank up the poundage. They use carbon inserts and carbon arrow, and shoot continuously.
How fast is too fast and what is gained?
Hunters broke the 300 fps barrier years ago, but as time goes on, I see fewer people maxing out the poundage of their bow. And, to be honest with you, I'm seeing far fewer people with shoulder injuries caused by taking their body to a point where it never intended to go.
I now advise people to shoot what feels comfortable to them. A test of strength and determination isn't required to be a successful deer hunter.
Most deer hunters are content to keep the poundage down to a comfortable level, and where drawing a bow is fun ... and is never painful.
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