String Jumping - Picking an Aim Point is Not Simple | Bowhunting Whitetails w/ Bill Winke

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • One of the greatest challenges we face as bowhunters occurs after we hit full draw. Deer hear the shot and drop to load their legs in order to bound away. It starts dropping while the arrow is still on its way. If the shot is past 20 yards, we have to guess where the deer will be when the arrow gets arrives.
    After many years, and many disappointments, I have come up with a system that seems to work most of the time. Maximum range on a whitetail is not determined by our performance on the range, but by our ability to judge what the deer will do when it hears the sound of the shot.

Комментарии • 184

  • @RS-ms1bz
    @RS-ms1bz Год назад +19

    My bet is that for any bow hunter that's honest with themselves, that this has happened at least once. You're right, once you alert the deer, either by scent, sight or sound as in stopping them from walking to get a shot, that deer is primed to react at the slightest movement or sound. I've learned to really avoid any shots past 25 yards if I sense any kind of alertness from the deer. I also tend to aim low just from experiences I've had with deer dropping. Great video with examples.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +3

      I agree, but I think, based on my experience, that they drop at least a bit on almost every shot. As you note, the ones past 25 yards show the greatest result because the deer has time to drop farther.

    • @noahbrown9708
      @noahbrown9708 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@bill-winke Anther thing to look out for is that a deer can drop faster than normal if their head is low. They can swing their head up to get more force down on their back, so i'd almost prefer shooting an alert deer with his head up before I shoot a deer walking with it's head down.

    • @HaydenRhoden
      @HaydenRhoden 9 месяцев назад

      It just happened tonight and it’s the worst feeling

  • @derekdB
    @derekdB Год назад +5

    Thank you for being completely transparent while giving advice. I've really enjoyed your videos and podcasts that you've been on.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Thanks Derek. I appreciate the support and the comment. Have a great day.

  • @ericbowhunter
    @ericbowhunter Год назад +7

    Great information Bill. The main take away for new bow hunters is, deer move, and targets don’t.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      Eric, exactly. They aren't the same so don't assume your max range in the backyard is a realistic max when hunting.
      Thanks for the input.

  • @alexpinnow6509
    @alexpinnow6509 Год назад +1

    Always great to get insight from people like you that have taken so many deer and seen so much variation. I can't say I've had a 'gimmee' shot in my short career yet!

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      I have had a few slam dunks in my life, but anything past 25 yards always has some element of uncertainty in it. That is why I have finally just decided that aiming low is the key on almost all the shots I will take past that distance.

  • @josephtreadlightly5686
    @josephtreadlightly5686 Год назад +2

    Bill, thank u cuz I know the amount of editing that film was. I was once in a wooded area in mid-December living in a fish house with only propane for power. I was dropped off on a logging road & I told my uncle who was going ice fishing not to come back for 6 days. With these conditions I would be on stand 1 hour after sun up. On the 5th morning a good track by the spot I was hunting that morning was fresh just b4 I arrived. Midday I figured that I needed to get down & try to cut off that deer returning from eating in a nice cedar swamp. It did & I was on the ground. When u r level on the ground with the deer it complicates things. So I aimed low @ 20 yards & waited until it was 17 & shot low. Only movement on the doe was spinning but more like about the time of impact. Lungs & clipped the liver on the exit. Arrow hit right where the white hair meets the side hair. On the ground u have one thing going for u. U don't shoot over or under a vital area as much as u hit both sides which helps greatly. Deer walk upright & don't tilt until they move quite a bit & @ that point u aren't hitting an exact spot. But judging the animals behavior & knowing that the deer in the area hadn't been hunted for a month let's u not 2nd guess your shot. The only other deer I ever shot on the ground were both during conditions that were too windy to stay up in the 🌳 so sound wasn't an issue. The phrase "I'd rather be lucky than good" describes the deer better than us hunters😅. Only thing I try to do is win an ambush & try to gain knowledge during late season to put myself there on the right day rather than a day or week late. Thanks again for all your hard work.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Joseph, that is great insight. Living in a fish house for six days in mid-December is pretty dang hard-core. Good for you and congrats on the great hunt. Best to you.

  • @mitchellgenz1373
    @mitchellgenz1373 Год назад +3

    Great tips Bill, I have never attempted to stop a moving animal, I try to anticipate where it will be at the time I release, works for me.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Yes, that works well if you have the experience. It just doesn't work for everyone as the skill is not universal - not everyone can do it. So for us to shoot at walking deer on the videos is going to encourage the wrong behavior. If you have the practiced skill and timing to hit lungs on a walking deer, that is better than stopping them. Good input.

  • @YummiestEver
    @YummiestEver 10 месяцев назад +1

    Found this after I missed high yesterday. Wish I found it earlier bc I probably wouldn't have made that same mistake. Thanks for the footage and tips.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад +1

      Sorry for the misfortune. You will get the next one. Good luck.

  • @rfcorreiaiv
    @rfcorreiaiv Год назад +2

    thank you for the info- good stuff- thank you the candid honesty. If it wasn't so hard it would not be as much fun :)

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Thanks Ralph for the comment and the support. Have a great day.

  • @alvinbarrett741
    @alvinbarrett741 Год назад +1

    Great video Bill , I have had my share of ups and downs with this . Unfortunately Its been on some of my biggest that i have shot at . It’s definitely a tough moment in the whitetail woods in the rut being that sometime you have only a few seconds to get a shot or make a decision. Look forward to another video . Thanks Bill

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Thanks Alvin. Yes, in the calm of your living room this all seems a lot easier than it does in the deer woods. Plus, I am not necessarily one of those "ice water in his veins" kind of guys anyway. So, I have to remove as many decisions from the moment of truth as I can by making those decisions and rehearsing in advance. Good luck.

  • @MrShroomcloud
    @MrShroomcloud Год назад +1

    My a-ha moment was recording (on VHS 😂) the old Saturday morning ESPN outdoor videos and using a dry erase marker (on my TV screen) and correlating the deer's position upon release and comparing it to the deers position at the moment of impact. I was amazed how the majority of deer dropped if there was any kind of distance involved. I was also puzzled about how little "TV" hunters of that era talked about deer "ducking the string".... anticipating it, and aiming lower in certain situations.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I didn't really start to understand it until I started filming and had the footage to go back through on the computer using the editing software. We would go frame by frame to see the position of the deer drop super fast in the last few frames. To the naked eye you can't even see it, most times. I think that is why people think they are shooting high, but in reality the deer dropped and came back up so fast that they didn't even see the movement.

  • @jwint563
    @jwint563 9 месяцев назад +2

    As someone who shoots trad bows and compounds there is a night and day difference in how a deer reacts with a longbow vs compound. So I do think a bow could be quiet enough to not trigger a reaction. I’ve got multiple shots at deer with trad bows. That hasn’t ever happened with a compound. Just something to think about.

  • @KOAOutdoors
    @KOAOutdoors Год назад

    Once again you've pounted out that there's no always or never in bow hunting. Thanks for the video.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      That is for sure Kirk. As much as we want to find specifics that we can hang our hats on as gospel, there are very few things that deer always do or never do. I wish they reacted to the shot more consistently though. I once thought I would just making a sound to alert them all before taking the shot so the likelihood of them jumping was higher (almost certain) across the boards. At least I would know what to expect. That might be where I end up one day. Good luck.

  • @DontjeB
    @DontjeB 6 месяцев назад

    Exactly how my story played out this year. Had a nice 8pt on October 28th at 22 yards, and sailed one just over his back. Shooting an old Oneida; a dinosaur by today's FPS standards. I was aiming for vitals while I should have been at the brisket. Tough way to learn, but I'm thankful for a clean miss instead of wounding the deer.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  6 месяцев назад +1

      It is a really hard lesson. I have learned it many times under a wide range of conditions. I have learned that it is almost impossible to judge 100% how any deer will react to the sound of the shot. All you can do is aim low on your longer shots. Good luck and thanks for the comment.

  • @timbow50
    @timbow50 Год назад +3

    Great points. I learned long ago to not make a sound to stop a moving animal. I agree it instantly puts them on alert. For years I do my best to not alert them in any way. I can’t remember taking a shot at a deer past 25 yards ever. I learned to aim low because nearly every deer will drop some it seems. I prefer animals that are relaxed if there’s that opportunity. I’ve also noticed when shooting from inside a some kind of blind the hits seem to be where you want them versus from my ladder stands where you have to remember to hold lower. It’s a fickle thing and there is no definitive answer. 👍👍👀

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +2

      When in doubt - aim low. That way you either miss clean or kill. It stinks to miss, but that is better than a wound and you can always hunt that deer again in a different part of his range if he does associate the missed shot with specific danger (which he may not). Good input.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +3

      Further, I think you can ethically take the longer shots, you just have to aim well low. That way it is a clean kill or a miss.

    • @stephenballard3759
      @stephenballard3759 2 месяца назад

      My question is then, wont you hit the legs if they stand still for it?

  • @Bloodstreamful
    @Bloodstreamful 8 месяцев назад

    A man that speaks the truth! SE ALA deer laugh at a arrow past 30yd especially if you stopem.

  • @philiprohs
    @philiprohs Год назад

    Thanks for not trying to sell me seeds every 5 seconds, saying you thought of it first and instead just being a real and honest hunting buddy in your videos.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I appreciate the comment Philip. I hope you have a great day.

  • @davez3887
    @davez3887 Год назад +1

    Happened to me two years ago at 40 yds. Still was able to double lung, but high shot and he turned. First time that I realized that after 36 years of hunting. Amazing to see.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      It is amazing. I never realized how often it happens until I started filming the hunts.

  • @edwardclark5211
    @edwardclark5211 9 месяцев назад +1

    Dream Big man down here in MS!

  • @paulshumate2904
    @paulshumate2904 Год назад +1

    Great info Bill, I've always been the type to Aim low because it seems the deer in the part of NC I live in are always on high alert. I've seen a couple instances where they didn't jump but I was still in the kill zone..

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I have hunted deer in the south some, but in my experience they are definitely faster to drop than Midwest deer. Sounds like your strategy is working perfectly. Thanks for the input. Have a great day.

  • @sarafayelawton652
    @sarafayelawton652 10 месяцев назад

    Really good info. Did not realize they dropped that much
    Thanks!

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  9 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks Sara. We appreciate the support and comment. Have a great day and good luck.

  • @daltonwilliams6297
    @daltonwilliams6297 6 месяцев назад

    Hunted MS my whole life. I’ve had 2 does, one at 25 yards, broadside completely push and spin away from the arrow. Watched the arrow sail right where I was aiming and the deer get outta there. It’s truly incredible.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  6 месяцев назад

      Yes, the fastest deer I have ever seen was in MS. It was a doe too. She was at 22 yards and was completely gone when the arrow got there. She was alert, but still, I didn't expect her to move that fast. I was shocked.

  • @SirSloop1919
    @SirSloop1919 9 месяцев назад +2

    The head was down on a lot of shots in this video. Wait for the head to be up for the shot. Head up limits the deers ability to move the kill zone. They can only drop at the speed of gravity. With the head down, they can fling their head up while dropping their front legs. They can significantly change the kill zone in a head down orientation. I also try to wait for the close front leg to be forward to open up the kill zone, so I can aim more forward away from the liver. Happy hunting!

    • @rossmarty9013
      @rossmarty9013 9 месяцев назад +1

      Happened to me with the deer of my life so far last year. All odds were against me other than the fact he was there. 30 yards on a dead silent night semi alert with his head down, I put it right behind his leg on the belly line and he hit the ground like a sack of potatoes. Must've clipped his back straps as we trailed hi for 200 yards on decent blood the it totally stopped. Had hair fat and solid meat on the arrow, little to no blood. 2 weeks later he was shot again by a neighbor with a crossbow back in the guts and he was never found. That next spring we mowed the food plot and hit a body with the tractor, looked around and found his shed to perfectly match the hole on his head. Was a tough winter but it's crazy to think he lived possibly another 2½ months after his last injury in a pretty brutal winter in mimnesota. Good news is I have one picture of an almost exactly identical deer on camera in August, hes got some offspring around my area I can only hope I get a second chance at one in his bloodline. Was an estimated 145 in 8 point, perfectly symmetrical. Hoping his son surpasses him

  • @stevebostic9812
    @stevebostic9812 Год назад +1

    Bill, since moving to trad hunting (2002), I have seen that distance (closer for accuracy) and less noise and movement are important. Last season, another lesson learned was with self bows (even quieter) and on an alert doe, I need not aim at the brisket, but aim at the heart or just behind. I’ve had louder recurves cause string jump where aiming really low helps. Yep, she didn’t move!

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +2

      Good insight. I shot a few deer with recurves back in the early 90s but they were so close that I didn't have to worry about them beating my arrow. I have had some really quiet compounds over the years and the deer even heard those. The only time I have not had deer hear the bow was when they were in the woods and the wind was blowing. Then I have not seen any reaction to the shot. One buck I shot at and missed and he never knew it. He just started walking again and actually came closer where I finally killed him! That was a windy day though.

  • @huntinsutton
    @huntinsutton Год назад +1

    Great vidoe Bill. I 100% agree with you. I grew up with a weekend warrior gun hunting family. I started bow hunting and had to learn everything on my own. I struggled with high hits and continued for about 10 years or so and also losing a few deer. Now days I aim low heart in the armpit area. If they don't drop at all its smoke city. Even it they do I tend to hit them perfectly dead center lung. I just couldn't get myself to aim under the brisket like you do but to each their own. I also noted there are a lot of broadheads, even vanes that whistle. Have a friend stand down range in a safe place (behind shed or something) and take a few shots. You'll be amazed how some sound like Netflix footballs going towards the target. Best bowhunting advice you can give is to ALWAYS AIM LOW!!
    Love the vidoes
    PS my less experienced brother won't listen to me when I tell him this 😅. He'll learn the hard way 😢.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      Michigan Man, thanks and your brother will definitely learn the hard way. We all do, it seems! You are probably low enough with a heart aimpoint on most deer, but I have seen a few at 30 yards that dropped 10 inches, though I don't think I have seen one on video drop more than that. Maybe I need to raise my aimpoint slightly. Good input. Have a great day.

    • @huntinsutton
      @huntinsutton Год назад +1

      @@bill-winke thanks you too. I rarely ever shoot more than 30yds, 35 tops.

  • @russelllangworthy8855
    @russelllangworthy8855 Год назад

    Good topic, Mr. Winke. I appreciate that you addressed stopping deer. I’ve been preaching for years that when you stop a deer, it’s being alerted and the likelihood of it ducking the arrow increases exponentially. People want to argue with me because I’m not an expert…even though I’ve been bowhunting since the ‘70s. Coming from you, maybe people will be more willing to accept it as the truth.
    Also, this new belief that the deer is alerted by the sound of the arrow rather than the “pop” of the bow going off is nonsense. The sound of the bow gets to the deer probably before the arrow is even a few inches off the string.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Russell, thanks for the comment. I used to shoot all my deer 25 yards and in walking. If they were farther, I stopped them and if they were moving faster than a walk I stopped them. But once we started doing video I decided I had better not do that anymore because I was probably sending the wrong message. I practiced those moving shots and had a pretty good system for executing them, but I didn't want people to start shooting at moving deer without that background. Like you, I think they react to the first thing they hear, whether that is the bow or the arrow - or both. Good input. Have a great day.

  • @davidbilliter5619
    @davidbilliter5619 8 месяцев назад

    I have 2 examples from personal experiences . First happened several years ago . Nice p&y 9pt. He and his small 8pt buddy had been playing around while coming in. Finally, the big buck gave me a shot at 37 yards. At the release, the buck spun to face the smaller buck . At the release, I was aiming behind the right shoulder. I hit him squarely in the LEFT EYE ! He bolted w the arrow hanging out of the eye socket. A quick decent and pursuit ended with a killing shot while He was hung up in some vines.
    Next was several years later on a super nice 150+ 8pt. He was following a doe and stopped at 27 yards . The pin was set for 18yrds to hit on point at 30ft for straight down shots from my normal 30ft stand height. I aimed bottom heart expecting 3-5 inches of reaction to the shot. He didn't move at all til the arrow smacked a tree trunk on the other side of him . I cut 2 hairs on the leg /chest angle .clean miss. That setup was shooting 326fps and it shot 2.5 " low at 27 yards. I missed right where the arrow was suppose to hit at 27yds.
    All we can do is roll the dice based on the situation . It took 5 years to get over that last one, lol.

  • @palmershane68
    @palmershane68 Год назад

    Thanks for the information!

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I appreciate the support and the comment Shane. Have a great day.

  • @takurghar1621
    @takurghar1621 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks....this is good advise for me

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks for the support Tak. We appreciate it and good luck this fall.

  • @gilream
    @gilream Год назад

    Another great video

  • @realist516
    @realist516 8 месяцев назад

    Man awesome video. Did this literally yesterday missed a nice 6 point. Ill get him next time anticipating the drop with my aim.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  8 месяцев назад +1

      That's right. You will get him next time. Good luck.

  • @perrytomassini8331
    @perrytomassini8331 Год назад

    Great advice

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Thanks Perry. I hope you have a great day.

  • @andybriars9713
    @andybriars9713 10 месяцев назад

    the immediate after shot behaviors like quickly lowering bow post release. Adds a visual component backed up by sound

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for the comment Andy. Good luck this fall.

  • @anthonyfiducia
    @anthonyfiducia Год назад +3

    Thanks for this advice, I had a few high and back hits this last season, that I could not recover.
    I plan on aiming for the low heart this coming season.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      That should really help. It is amazing how much they drop even when they don't seem alert. Good luck.

  • @tonyellis6383
    @tonyellis6383 10 месяцев назад +1

    yeah this is a really good topic to talk about. My experience is literally the same. The only difference is I feel a deer can hear that arrow coming, but regardless the result is the same. I just pray that the deer comes 25 yards and in, haha.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад +2

      Agreed. 25 and in are good for me with Midwest deer. I think they hear the shot first though. Maybe some of the reaction is the sound of the arrow, but to get started dropping that soon, they have to reacting to the sound of the string bottoming. Have a great day.

  • @glorybound7599
    @glorybound7599 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks and God bless.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад

      We appreciate the support and the comment. God Bless you too.

  • @huntererickson4453
    @huntererickson4453 Год назад +1

    This happened to me this last bow season, 35 yards broad side, un alerted I aimed low for him to duck my arrow and he didn’t duck. I hit him low in no man’s land and ended up finding him last week shed hunting. Definitely not the way I wanted to find him but glad I did find him.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +2

      I think the only other thing you could do in that situation is to aim off the deer (below the brisket line) and then if he doesn't duck you miss him clean. It is super hard to know exactly what any deer will do when they hear the shot and that same deer might react differently on different days. Who knows. Very inexact science. Just aim low enough that you miss if they don't drop, I guess. That is my strategy, for the most part. Good luck.

  • @timstanley3307
    @timstanley3307 4 месяца назад

    WOW this very thoughtful video. I have always had this problem. It has caused me to stop bow hunting at times for a couple of years. Um trying to figure this out and debating what bow I should use this year

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  4 месяца назад

      Tim, I appreciate it. My personal conclusion is that a faster bow will reduce how far a deer can drop after hearing the sound. Some think that a quieter bow will be quiet enough that the deer don't hear it, but it has been experience that this is only true on windy days. Otherwise, it is tough to get a bow quiet enough especially if the deer is already alert. Good luck.

  • @stephenballard3759
    @stephenballard3759 2 месяца назад +1

    No bow can be so quiet it cannot be heard, but a quiet bow definitely helps. Some of my selfbows come close, but you can still hear the arrow in flight.
    If I sneak up behind you and snap my fingers, thats a different reactio. from sneaking up behind you and letting off a firecracker.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  2 месяца назад +1

      Agree. All are good points. I also think that windy days will help cover up the shot noise. I have had a few deer that offered me a second shot after missing the first and in those cases it was windy. One time it was a buck so focused on a doe that he didn't care.

  • @groundrootsoutdoors627
    @groundrootsoutdoors627 Год назад

    So I did a video on arrow noise. “Arrow Noise, Why deer duck the string”. You can watch it or not that’s not the point but vanes and arrow weight do make a difference as well as bow noise. I started to put GoPros in the field and captured the arrows buzzing, one arrow SPINED a deer because of it. Awesome video.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      I still think they react to the first thing they hear whether it is the sound of the shot or the sound of the arrows. I know the arrows make noise as they fly, but that noise will get to the deer after the sound of the release. Maybe they react to both, as they blur together. The entire phenomena is more or less a mystery still. All we know for sure is that they do react and that if you don't anticipate it, you will hit high. Thanks for the input.

    • @groundrootsoutdoors627
      @groundrootsoutdoors627 Год назад

      @@bill-winke oh no doubt. I love videos like this. I’m a geek when it comes to hunting and having a more ethical hunting setup. I like the idea of a faster setup but a heavier setup is quieter. I love it. Again thanks for the video

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      @@groundrootsoutdoors627 You are welcome. Thanks for watching.

  • @Hawkerdude67
    @Hawkerdude67 10 месяцев назад +1

    Ive read many of your articles on this and I think you have it about as good as possible. You have to play the odds and you cant shoot fast enough to beat the drop.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад +2

      That's what I have learned. I think we aim dead on out to 20-25 yards and then we have to aim increasingly low. 40 yards is a really long shot at a whitetail for this reason. Good luck.

  • @bch5513
    @bch5513 10 месяцев назад

    Try southern deer...
    My son had this happen TWICE yesterday with me in the tree next to him yesterday. Had one deer at 12. yards drop completely to the ground where her chest touched!! He aimed one inch BELOW the chest and still skipped off her back. It was nuts.
    Slower bow cause 13 years old but still.. 40# diamond infinite edge pro 26" draw. Again. 10 yards. Feeding on acorns at 12 yards.
    Another at 15 he shot for heart and it wasn't close . Missed 4 inches high.
    HA. Thanks for mentioning it right after I posted 😊. They are wild

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад

      I hunted Mississippi a few times. Had a doe at 22 yards one time. Shooting probably around 290 fps. She was completely gone by the time the arrow got there. I was shocked that any living thing could react that fast.

  • @jefferyburch4808
    @jefferyburch4808 Год назад

    Good words

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Thanks for the comment Jeffery. Much appreciated. Have a great day.

  • @allentodd5436
    @allentodd5436 Год назад +1

    I've only been bowhunting seriously for about 5 years now and I've had 2 deer completely duck an arrow. One was a 135" buck at 40 yards (my only 40 yard shot ever) and another a doe at 23 yards roughly. Im not sure if I'm right or not but I've tryed to aim for just the heart or low enough to hit the heart on quartering away shots this past year. I don't ever normally shoot over 30 yards but I don't have near the experience of alot of really good hunters. It seems that just as you're saying Bill that it can be very situational.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      It is situational but the rules aren't clear. One time the deer reacts a certain way in that situation and the next time it reacts a different way. Also, not all deer have the same sensitivity to the sound of the bow. So, after all these years, I am just mostly aiming low on everything and living with the miss if the deer doesn't drop. I wish it was more predictable, but it just isn't, unfortunately. Good luck.

    • @allentodd5436
      @allentodd5436 Год назад +1

      @@bill-winke thanks Bill👍

  • @JeffRadford-kc5yj
    @JeffRadford-kc5yj 6 месяцев назад

    One thing I've noticed is with high poundage bows is the release is making noise when fired , seen videos and heard it at same time deer start dropping before the arrow leaves the bow, just a thought you would like to hear. Good luck to all bow hunters as i get older i know my days are numbered.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  6 месяцев назад

      Ah, Jeff. You need to enjoy every one of them to the fullest! Celebrate every day! Thanks for the comment. We all appreciate it. Have a great day.

  • @meyerske1
    @meyerske1 Год назад

    Hey Biil, I believe that Mark Drury sights his bow 2 inches low (impact point) at 20 yards, 3 inches low at 30, and 4 inches low at 40.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      That makes a lot of sense. Something I should probably be doing too. Good input. Thanks.

  • @ace_8903
    @ace_8903 9 месяцев назад

    Hey Bill, I have noticed when their head is down, they have a more drastic drop. Somthing to keep in mind with relaxed deer. I would value a alert deer's consistency over a relaxed deer's unknown characteristic.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  9 месяцев назад +1

      I have heard that too, but I have also seen many of them drop really fast with their heads up. When you stop a walking buck for the shot, his head is up and I have seen several of them drop right off the map when the bow fired. I am not willing to adjust my aim point depending on the head position alone. I have seen too many deer drop a lot with their heads up.

  • @drumandball
    @drumandball Год назад

    This is a big reason that I shoot a crossbow. People talk about it not being as sportsmanlike, and to an extent, I get it. Shooting a crossbow is far less challenging. But from an ethical standpoint, when you're shooting a bolt at 400+FPS, SO MUCH of the guesswork is eliminated. And to me, minimizing the risk of injuring a deer with a non-lethal shot makes it worth it.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I never thought about it that way, Isaac. I don't have an agenda against crossbows, but I will say they are not the same as shooting a vertical bow - but that is what you are saying too. I never thought of them as being more ethical. I suppose any weapon can be ethical or not ethical depending on how it used, be it vertical bow or crossbow. Thanks for the input.

    • @drumandball
      @drumandball Год назад

      @@bill-winke Absolutely! A crossbow shot at 80 yards is a lot less ethical than a vertical bow shot at 20 yards.
      For me, I have young kids and only get to hunt around 10 times a year. So I want to maximize my effectiveness on converting encounters to kills. I feel comfortable with my crossbow out to 40. With a compound bow, it'd be less. And that has more to due with the velocity difference than my own personal profficiencey.

  • @thetrooper1061
    @thetrooper1061 Год назад +1

    Wish people would understand this applies to crossbows as well. Bolts do travel slightly faster but they lose speed quicker and are louder flying through the air than an arrow. Just have to shake my head when guys act like crossbows are 100 yard weapons even though the aim point on a crossbow at 100 yards is around 6 feet over the target and the bolt takes 1.5 seconds to reach target

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      I couldn't agree more. I remember when one crossbow company was advertising game killing accuracy at 100 yards. Yes, maybe on the range and yes, maybe if the deer doesn't move - but, unfortunately, they do do move. You are right, this exact same advice applies to crossbows - 40 yards is a long shot on any whitetail regardless if it is a vertical bow or a crossbow because the deer will move (drop) for both weapons. Very good input. Have a great day.

  • @natemihlbachler3511
    @natemihlbachler3511 Год назад

    I've never had a mature buck jump the string despite one of them being shot at just over 50 yards and one just under 50 yards. I've had several smaller more nimble does and fawn do it. The difference might be the bucks we're in cover and in rut mode vs the slickheads being out of the rut and more in feeding mode as well as out on a fooplot in a more exposed higher stress environment where they we on edge. I've had deer not only duck the string but flat out gone before the arrow got there. It is mind blowing.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      It is amazing how quick they are. I think you are on to something there. I do think they are more likely to jump the string in open settings. Also, I think the sound of the bow carries better in those settings too. Good input.

    • @natemihlbachler3511
      @natemihlbachler3511 Год назад

      @@bill-winke That's another reason that I shoot about a 400 grain arrow and don't buy into the heavy arrow thing. Just like coyote hunting with a fast flat bullet the fastest flattest projectile takes as much guess work out as possible and gets there as fast as possible. It seems so many people build their setups around bad shots. If you put it in the boiler room nothing else really matters imo.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      @@natemihlbachler3511 Agreed. I hate to come out with any conclusive thoughts, but my own experience suggests that speed is more important than people think on beating string jumpers. If we could consistently get our bows quiet enough that the deer don't hear them, then I would change my mind. If they are going to hear it anyway, then getting the arrow there sooner is a big advantage.

  • @glorybound7599
    @glorybound7599 10 месяцев назад

    They will drop 6-10 inches, aim accordingly based on the distance. I made a 55 yard shot on a 200 pound buck with my crossbow that shots 340 feet per second. The shot was made from a box stand 13 foot off the ground, near the end of shoot light. The deer walked in to 25 yards straight at me turn turned abruptly and started walking away. I tensed, thinking my opportunity was decreasing with every step he took. I bleated a call at 35 years and he just kept walking at 50 yards I did the same thing but much louder. He turned right and gave me a perfect 1/4 away shot. I aimed 6 inches over his back for the distance and made a perfect heart shot. In the low lighten conditions I thought I actually missed the deer. I believe the shot was very lucky and blessed but I hope I never do it again. I now have a crossbow that shoots 385 feet per second and shoots 2 inch shot groups at 50 yards but I plan all my shots from 15-35 yards.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад

      Speed definitely helps, I have seen that with compound bows. I wish they all did the same thing, but they don't. I have seen some drop that seemed completely relaxed and some not drop that were alert. To play it safe, you have to aim low on all of the shots. Have a great day.

  • @artbrennhofer8283
    @artbrennhofer8283 Год назад

    Great topic Bill. Do you believe that this could be related somehow to the deer's experiences through their life to that point?

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I do Art. I think in some areas they are wired tighter too. Whether that is hunting pressure or predation or something else. Some deer are just jumpier than others, even in the same range. Also, if a buck has a doe on his mind, he is less likely to drop down to run than if he is just out feeding - in my experience. I wish this was easier to predict. Good luck.

  • @km6731
    @km6731 9 месяцев назад

    Good Topic. I say shoot a quieter bow with heavy arrows and now mechanicals. if you miss you miss and if you hit, you get penetration. Even if you hit high and get a pass through, that deer will survive if its a muscle hit. if you're hunting quick deer, shoot them closer.

  • @glorybound7599
    @glorybound7599 10 месяцев назад

    I made a tight aim on a buck in the triangle behind the shoulder only to hit the center of the shoulder blade when he heard the pop from my crossbow at 30 yards. I found the skeletal remains 2 years later.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад

      Sorry to hear that. That does stink.

  • @underdogoutdoors
    @underdogoutdoors Год назад

    Quartering away shots are most forgiving, not always possible, but when it is, usually it's "good night Irene" afterwards.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I love those too. Any impact seems to lead to the vitals on those shots.

  • @Splitlip1948
    @Splitlip1948 Год назад

    Speed of sound is 1125 fps. Fast bow is 300 fps. Which gets there first? Arrow sound w/ vanes and feathers also contributes to this also.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Exactly. I did a long mathematical study on this one time and came the same exact results that we have seen on video - you have to aim at least 6 inches low on 30 yard shots if it looks like the deer is likely to drop. Have a great day.

  • @jamesmarsee3297
    @jamesmarsee3297 Год назад

    There is a DVD called Dead deer walking , that talks about this.Good DVD if a guy can find it.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      I will see if I can find it. Thanks for the comment and the support. Have a great day.

  • @nathanhoffman9579
    @nathanhoffman9579 Год назад

    I am wondering if it would be beneficial to sight the bow pins about 1 inch low from bullseye.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I have considered this but I haven't done it yet. Maybe you are right, maybe that is the best strategy. I need to think about the tradeoffs some more. Good input. Have a great day.

  • @christophergolla775
    @christophergolla775 Год назад +1

    If you use a heavier arrow, the bow will be substantially quieter...Nearly silent. However, you then have to deal with a lot of arrow drop. You would have to limit yourself to closer shots

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Or you have to use a rangefinder on anything past about 25 yards.

  • @kenfernsler6507
    @kenfernsler6507 8 месяцев назад

    I use a single movable pin. Ive gotten lucky on a few occasions on my better bucks shooting 35 yards with my 20 yard pin in the heat of the moment aiming for the lungs. In all cases I heart shot them. I did the same thing out in Kansas on a giant. He never dropped because even on public land I found the deer not to be anywhere as alert as a deer from PA.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  8 месяцев назад +1

      Ken, that is a very good lesson. Reading body language during the moment of truth is tough. There is a lot going on, but aiming low usually works. I would have done the same thing on the KS buck I am guessing. We get them dropping here in Iowa a lot and the pressure is not higher here than KS. I think that buck in KS was just lucky. It was not his day to die, unfortunately for you.

  • @JavinMullet
    @JavinMullet Год назад

    I love this topic and I will continue splitting hears on this just for the sake of conversation and debate. Let’s use numbers and science, and a 40 yard shot illustration. Sound travels at 375 yards per sec, this means it would take 0.106 seconds for the sound of the bow to get to the deer at 40 yards, with a 300fps arrow, this gets your arrow to 10.6 yards out of the bow before the deer hears the bow. This leaves 30 yards of “flight” time for the deer to react, if we can get 250 fps for those 30 yards, that gives the deer 0.36 sec to react. That seams like a lot of reaction time in my mind. (We could figure out how fast they can drop from start to arrow impact in Premier Pro timeline). In all the shot illustrations on the video, the deer seam to start dropping when the arrow is 10 +/- yards from the deer. At the 5:30 mark on the 40 yard shot with several other deer feeding around, the only deer that drops before the arrow gets there is the target deer, the rest all react after the arrow hits. It would make sense to me that the deer that react from just the shot are the deer that get completely out of the sight picture. If you “stop” a deer, this is more likely to happen. Again at the 5:30 in the video, at 40 yards and I’m assuming out of a redneck, it would seam they didn’t even hear the shot, and he still got just a few inches of drop before the arrow hits and the other deer react to his reaction, except maybe the 1.5 on the left edge of the frame.

    • @JavinMullet
      @JavinMullet Год назад

      This still leaves us with a combination somewhere between reacting to just the bow going off (super jumpers), to hearing the bow then the arrow, to long distance shots and quite arrows where they hear nothing. 😅

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      I once ran all the numbers on this and decided to give the deer .1 seconds of reaction time. I think that is probably too slow but it is an easy number to work with. I ran the study with a 260 fps bow and a 300 fps bow. The difference in how far the deer dropped at 30 yards was about three inches. So, increasing your arrow speed (one way or another) from 260 fps to 300 fps bought you about three inches at 30 yards. In my video study, (using the audio profile on the timeline to signify when the bow went off and then counting frames - each one is 1/30 of a second) I see most deer in my area start to drop when the arrow is about 20 yards from the bow. That is why I say that shots of 20 and in, no need to aim low. In the south that is different - they react faster. Good insight. Have a great day.

  • @Thelaubster1
    @Thelaubster1 Год назад

    My solution with my setup (300fps) where i hunt is i shoot a single pin slider set to 24 yds and i aim exactly the same spot from 5yds-40yds without ever moving my pin. It auto compensates for deer dropping.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I have heard of guys doing that. I would be tempted then to grunt at every deer I shoot at to be sure they are all alert and likely to drop rather than not being sure.

  • @glorybound7599
    @glorybound7599 10 месяцев назад

    Does drop significantly more. I aimed low into the heart lung area broadside from a ladder stand 17 feet up and 20 yards. The doe dropped and the bolt hit just below the spine and fortunately severed the main artery.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад

      I have sure seen my share of bucks drop too, unfortunately. I do think does are more likely to drop when they aren't alert than bucks, but both drop a lot when they hear the shot.

  • @HumbleHunts
    @HumbleHunts Год назад

    I find it interesting that at the 6:16 mark those two does are inline with each other but the doe closest to you reacts first and then a split second later the second doe starts to load it’s legs. So the question maybe still remains, are they reacting to the sound of the arrow? Bow or was the second doe reacting to the first doe dropping?

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      I will probably die with the belief that they are reacting to the first sound they hear, which in most cases, is the bow. Good point though. I never noticed that the two does reacted at different times. It just shows how truly unpredictable this is and why you always have to assume they will drop even if they don't. Some don't, for whatever reason. Some drop faster than others, etc. This is a very inexact science.

  • @ambushactionoutdoors
    @ambushactionoutdoors 8 месяцев назад

    Great video and explained a lot of my 2nd guessing work. Southern deer are way more jumpy. Or maybe their reaction time is there because of the lack of massive fat bodied animals like the Midwest 😂

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  8 месяцев назад

      We love our fat bodied deer! A agree, they are much quicker in the south. I once took a 22 yard shot at a doe in Mississippi that was completely gone by the time the arrow got there and I was shooting about 290 fps at the time. I was shocked. I have seen anything like that here in Iowa. The quickest one I have seen was the one I shot on Nov. 22 here. She was under 20 yards and still dropped about two to three inches by the time the arrow got there.

  • @JayN4GO
    @JayN4GO Год назад

    Knowing limits is important. 30 yard max for me. I’m paranoid of wounding

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      And well we should all be. I think if you are good on the range to 40 then a 40 yard shot is reasonable when hunting, but again, only if you aim low. Good input. Thanks for the support.

  • @johnlindsay8630
    @johnlindsay8630 Год назад

    Really enjoy your Siri. Is there a bill? Keep them, my friend.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Not sure what this means, John, but I am going to take it as a compliment(?). Thanks for the comment and have a great day.

  • @rfb7117
    @rfb7117 Год назад

    Bill, wouldn't you aim low and also slightly forward so that when they drop and turn away you are not in the gut? thanks, Bob

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      Not necessarily forward. In my experience they drop and wheel away and that actually means the aimpoint would have to down and BACK. For now, just stick with low. I will study some more video and come up with whether or not it makes sense to aim back on every shot. But I don't think forward is a good idea - not from what I have seen. Good input. Thanks.

  • @fergieferguson2457
    @fergieferguson2457 9 месяцев назад

    I’ve always said good thing I’m not a target “3D shooter” because when I sight my bow in its at least 1 inches low at 20 at 30 I’m right at 2 inches low and I don’t worry to much about 40 anymore I more than likely will not draw back..

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  9 месяцев назад

      Fergie, that is a good way to do it. I know others that do that too. I think, from my experience, you need to be at least four inches low at 30. I think dead on at 20 and 40 is a crap shoot. I aim below the brisket on alert 40 yard shots. Probably at least six inches low. Good luck.

  • @tikitak1155
    @tikitak1155 9 месяцев назад

    I don't think there's a right and wrong on this one. I think it's a matter of preference, and an individual's situation.
    I've never made a bleat sound just so I can stop a deer's movement. I planned my shots ahead, as it gets within range. Sometimes, it can walk right past me and I'll just let it be.
    I don't own land, so I don't have the luxury of choosing which deer I want to take, and when. So I've always had to try my best not to spook it. I've missed plenty of time, when my arrow hit a twig or something other than the deer. For the most part, the deer would do a quick jump, look around.....then it either goes back to feeding, or walking cautiously away, but never really run. This is especially true, when it's windy, or when acorns are dropping. I even get second chances because the deer thought my missed shots were acorns dropping. It jumps, and goes right back to eating. That's when the second chance comes in. That's just my situation. I hunt the same spot most of the year, so I can't afford to spook them. I could be totally wrong on this.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  9 месяцев назад

      I don't think you are wrong, it just comes down to where to aim once you decide to take the shot. If the shot is past 20 yards, there is some chance it will drop when it hears the bow fire even it appears completely relaxed. That is the hard part, knowing exactly where to aim. Good luck this fall.

  • @JohnDoe-jk8yy
    @JohnDoe-jk8yy 10 месяцев назад

    Lot of depends on the pressure too I think I hunt Alabama and you go to public lane

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад

      Agree. I have hunted deer in the south and they are way more likely to drop at the shot - and they are quicker too so they drop farther.

  • @johnw.9572
    @johnw.9572 6 дней назад

    Ive always aimed where the white of the belly meets the brown, right on the line behind the front leg and its been 98% success rate. I dont want to talk about that 2% 😂😂

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  3 дня назад

      Perfect solution. Nice job.

  • @davidfoster177
    @davidfoster177 Год назад

    Old school bowhunter here no trigger release no peep sight never stopped a deer on purpose in 40 years take walking shots all the time don't take shots over 32 yards in my opinion peep interferes with field of vision fingers are a more fluid release on moving deer stopping deer just puts them on high alert shoot same bow I bought when I was 14 unfortunately most new bows are built for a release unless traditional

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      David, it is a good system - it it's not broke, don't fix it. The bow I bought when I was 14 was a Bear Whitetail Hunter and I definitely would not want to be shooting that anymore! Most bows in the past 15 years are really good, but there were definitely some duds produced in the 80s, 90s, and early 2000s. I owned a few of them. Have a great day.

  • @jesse4530
    @jesse4530 Год назад

    It seems to me deer definitely duck more when their head is down compared to at alert.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      It does make sense that they can duck farther (or quicker) when they can use their head-raise movement for leverage to lower their body, but I don't think they duck more often when they have their head down. Maybe we are both saying the same thing. Good input. Thanks for the comment.

  • @Bullbluegill
    @Bullbluegill Год назад

    you just said it....I practice to 60, shoot to 25 and I prefer 12 to 17 yards. Ha

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      I would take 12 to 17 yard shots for the rest of my life! Thanks for the comment.

  • @allthewayupoutdoors3763
    @allthewayupoutdoors3763 Год назад

    I think you’ve hit on this before but don’t you think you can take a shot where you’re so far away that the deer doesn’t even hear the bow go off? I shot a mule deer at 92 yards in utah last year and the deer didn’t move at all and I pinwheeled him. My only guess was that he didn’t hear the bow or arrow coming and that’s why he didn’t react at all

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      That would be my guess too, regarding the mule deer. My experience with mule deer is that they are even more likely to drop since the way they run (bounce) requires them to drop dramatically just to get going. I have shot a couple of mule deer that really dropped. In my limited experience with whitetails at longer ranges, this is not the case. I shot a doe one time at 60 yards (a very long shot for a whitetail). She was facing to the right and when the arrow got there she was in the exact same spot but facing to the left! I was lucky to get both lungs on that one, but it showed me that they can (and do) still react to the bow at longer ranges. Maybe the number of jumpers at 60 yards is less as a percentage of the herd than the number at 30 yards, but they can still do it - so the question of where to aim still remains. Good input.

  • @mikemellon80
    @mikemellon80 Год назад

    I never try to stop a buck with a grunt right before shooting. I know i dont film my hunts and thats why I think lots of guys do it, for the footage but i wont do that. why put a buck on high alert?

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      Mike, it is not for the footage that we stop them, it is because if we shoot them walking we will get widely criticized for being unethical because we are setting a bad example. Not everyone has practiced the skills to make those walking shots and we would seem to be encouraging something (the walking shot) that would result in bad hits for many people watching the videos. But as we have noticed, stopping them can also result in bad hits.

    • @mikemellon80
      @mikemellon80 Год назад

      @@bill-winke I believe that for sure. people who film hunts for the public to see have to be really careful on what shots you show in videos. I learned a long time ago not to take walking shots. as a young hunter i shot very far back on a buck that was walking slow but was 30 yards away. i killed him but it wasnt a hunt for TV. I now try to let them stop naturally. i've had to watch really nice bucks walk out of range because they never stopped but thats just the way those hunts went. Now if i needed content to make money, who knows what i'd be doing

    • @mikemellon80
      @mikemellon80 Год назад

      also Bill, thanks for engaging so much with your subscribers. really makes your channel stand apart

  • @markpore8242
    @markpore8242 Год назад +1

    Just move your sights higher problem solved never have to think about string jump again 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      Mark, that probably makes sense for the 30 and 40 yard pins when whitetail hunting, but not the 20 yard pin. I need to think about it some more to try to decide if there is a downside to this approach. Thanks for the input. Have a great day.

    • @markpore8242
      @markpore8242 Год назад

      Holy crap Bill replying to me 🤯!! Iv been doing it last few years I just adjusted my pins and left my 20 yard alone. I aim center mass every shot it’s just natural like target practice to me at this point I have my 30 and 40 drop about 6” short of where I’m aiming and it ether heart shot them or if they duck double lung same thing as aiming low, just in the heat of the moment I don’t have to think about it my bow is already calibrated for it just put the pin center of the shoulder and watch the magic happen gotta trust in the process it works

    • @6saturdaysaweek
      @6saturdaysaweek Год назад

      Lmao

    • @6saturdaysaweek
      @6saturdaysaweek Год назад

      I think this discussion is more solid evidence why bow hunters should strive to get as close as possible for their shots on live animals. Some influencers want to take 90 yard shots on live animals and not show the follow up shot taken with a rifle, but there is a lot that can happen during the flight of an arrow. I’ve been fortunate that I’ve never had a deer jump the string on me. I shot a 10 point that was walking steadily. I picked a spot in his path to draw and then shot. I let him walk into the arrow. The deer never reacted until my arrow was through him. I found him within 30 yards of the shot. I was also taught to shoot at the bottom of the vitals, and always tend to hold low, think low 12 on a ASA target.
      As far as the sound goes, I believe the arrow is the detriment to arrow impacting the target animal. The sound is very comparable to baseball heading towards a batter. I also made a video from the targets POV and it is very surprising how easy it is to pick up the arrow sound vs. bow with the camera microphone. I think most misinterpret what the see in a video. We see the shot, and then see a deer drop and automatically assume it’s the bow. But in that half a second, there is a arrow hissing towards the animal. There is no cure (yet) to over come the arrows noise as it passes through air towards the target. The heavy arrow crowd may have an additional point in their argument, as you slow down an arrow wind sheer over the broad head and vanes will be reduced, and possibly not alert the animal as much.

    • @markpore8242
      @markpore8242 Год назад

      @@6saturdaysaweek LMAO! We’re talking about 20-40 yards where did you come from!

  • @curtwatkins9520
    @curtwatkins9520 3 месяца назад

    Shoot right above the leg or forward of that. Shoot a 500gr+ arrow and fixed blade. Farther forward is more lethal. DO NOT SHOOT BEHIND THE CREASE!!!!

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  3 месяца назад

      This episode is about string jumping, not where to aim on standing deer. The trick is to figure out where they will be after they move.

  • @dennisanderson-mp8hs
    @dennisanderson-mp8hs Год назад

    That’s actually not true deer are more likely to duck more when they are walking because they can duck and run faster than if they’re standing up, fully and looking at you

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      It's possible, but the biggest problem with jumping comes at 30 yards and farther and I never have taken a walking shot at those distances so I am not sure how the deer react to the shot when walking at those distances. Thanks for the comment.

  • @birddog7492
    @birddog7492 10 месяцев назад

    Don't alert deer if you don't have to. I see a lot of videos where people alert deer that didn't have to. keep those shots low on the kill zone and good luck.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  10 месяцев назад

      BirdDog, I agree, but I have sure seen them drop both ways. Rarely do they drop when they are walking, but I have seen many perfectly relaxed deer (bucks and does) drop at the sound of the shot.

  • @lisaannaallen6283
    @lisaannaallen6283 Год назад

    deer drop quicker with their head down "feeding". i try not to stop a deer . never not hold on hair. and your bow should go off with a dull thud rather than a sharp twak.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад

      All good advice. Thanks for the support and the input.

  • @nyleslehnen4751
    @nyleslehnen4751 Год назад

    Sometimes they jump.. sometimes they don’t! Lol as a bowhunter it’ll drive ya nuts until ya realize ya gotta inc this into your shot routine on bucks - best bow i ever shot was a Mathews Monster it was super fast way downrange and quiet. The Vertix is kinda loud compared and not as fast. Speed vs noise! That’s it! Wind direction carries sound or lack of wind sucks too. Best is a good cross or even better in your face wind, I think it depends even how old and smart and wiley he is too. Its tough man! I have lost my share to jumpers and even killed em days/weeks after because I aimed real low on the same deer! So I understand exactly what ya mean. To the point where it depends on the animal imo. Some move some don’t care at all seems. Maybe also rut and what he is focused on also big and how focused plus all the other variables too seems…

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      That's right. You nailed it! That is why this is so frustrating. All we can do is aim low on all of them that have any chance of dropping live with a few low misses. Have a great day.

    • @nyleslehnen4751
      @nyleslehnen4751 Год назад

      @@bill-winke or try and get em early! Later it gets in season and foliage drop seems like become more wiley by the day even with rut. I like that video ya did Oct vs Nov i like oct now too. Got a good one last Oct 15 last year he was just feeding around one of his bedrooms early morning saw him come in dark under light of moon i beat him by 5 min then he fed off and i had a dripper he was on cam and he came back in feeding toward it half hour after light and i had thermals blowing up solo filmed was cool.

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      @@nyleslehnen4751 Congrats on a great hunt. I am finding more and more reasons to like October too. I think we are just getting better at hunting it too, with the help of trail cameras, mostly. Have a great day.

    • @nyleslehnen4751
      @nyleslehnen4751 Год назад

      @@bill-winke you too Bill enjoy NE I love that area up there.

  • @jasonlarsen5739
    @jasonlarsen5739 Год назад

    Guilty 🤚

    • @bill-winke
      @bill-winke  Год назад +1

      It is a tough situation. Just about everyone falls victim to it at some point.