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Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Why a Slingshot?


Quail, slingshot

My first hunting was done with a BB gun or 12 gauge shotgun at age eight.  There is obviously a lot of difference in the capability between the two tools. I couldn't hunt much with the BB gun other than little birds, and I didn't like the 12 gauge, it was too big for me, kicked, and made a lot of noise.

I was stuck with those two gun options for a few years.  At age twelve I went to work in the hay fields with an uncle. I made enough money that summer to buy my school clothes and a beautiful Browning .22 semi-auto.   I always prefered the .22 for squirrels or rabbits  even when older. It simply seemed more appropiate than the bigger shotgun.

quail
My bow for big game and slingshot for small game.
I never owned a slingshot in my youth and can't remember using one at all.  I did have a .20 caliber Sheridan air gun, but I most often stuck with a .22 for my small game hunting.   Pumping up the Sheridan for a shot to often spooked what I was hunting.

I could go on and on about all the guns I've owned and shot and how I eventually became a deer hunter.

To keep this short and simple lets just say that after about ten years of whitetail hunting with a rifle I wanted more.  One way to get more was to start bow hunting.


At first I was little interested in the bow or bow hunting, I simply wanted to be allowed to hunt more. The close encounters of my first bow season changed my attitude. In a short time I was thinking the rifle too easy or not challenging enough. The bow was challenging; it took me six bow seasons to get my first deer.

I sometines saw rabbits, squirrel, quail, and other small game and pest while bow hunting for deer.
At first I carried extra arrows with small game tips/heads.  I soon realized taking a shot also required retriving the arrow.  Arrows are not cheap!

Hit or miss going out to retrieve an arrow was a big disturbance to my deer hunting area and spread my scent over a larger area.  I started looking for a better tool to use for small game while bow hunting.

My first thoughts were a rimfire handgun with quiet low power rounds or a air pistol.  I started doing research. When looking for air guns on the Marksman website I also saw their slingshots.  I'd actually bought a Marksman slingshot before my bow.

I'd never shot a bow and didn't want to spend a lot of money for a bow with no experience at all.  I thought shooting a slingshot would be similar to shooting a traditional bow and would only cost me a few dollars to try that first.

Now using a slingshot seems "a no-brainer" for a traditional archer, but I didn't know much about slingshots, and even less about using them on small game.  I already had one, so I bought some new tubes/bands, and ammo for it.  I thought it was fun to shoot, much like my bow,  but I couldn't hit anything consistently.

My internet research found a considerable number of serious slingshot shooters. What I read indicated that the slingshot was very capable of taking small game at short range.  I knew I had a lot more to learn.

I now had slingshots on my mind.  When I saw one for $2.99 in a local farm ranch store I bought two. I thought maybe I could shoot one of them better than the Marksman.

Soon it was deer season and on my second hunt of the season I half heartily stuck one of the cheap slingshots in my pocket along with some 3/8 inch steel slingshot ammo.

That morning while sitting on a short stool in my ground blind I heard something coming over my left shoulder. It was a covey of quail feeding by only five yards from me.  It was a few seconds before I thought about the slingshot.

I fished the slingshot out and of my pocket and missed, but the birds didn't seem to notice the shot.
I missed again, but the third steel ball nailed a cock.  The birds ran out to about ten yards as that one fluttered and died.

My forth shot was another miss, but the fifth ball took much of the side of a hen's head off.  She fluttered and flopped around and sent the others running for cover.  I was as excited as when I shot my biggest deer.  I couldn't believe I'd just taken two quail with a slingshot.  I was hooked!

I'll tell more about what I call my bowhunter's handgun and why I think the slingshot is such a great tool in future post.



1 comment:

  1. This was a good post, I have wild quail all over my property and I think a sling shot is how i will try to get aa couple for the table.

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