Grizzly 45 wrote: » [1] When was bow hunting made illegal in Ireland and under what act or statue? I suspect the wildlife act 1976 and its predecessor?
............. a person shall not— “(a) hunt any wild bird, wild mammal or protected wild animal by means of a trap, snare, net, line, hook, arrow, dart, spear or similar device however propelled, instrument or missile
[2] For what reason was it made illegal here in the ROIl? IE was there massive poaching going on or???
Cass wrote: » No idea really but off the top of my head: Probably too many injured animals Not clean enough The ability to use a firearm more effectively Firearms make noise whereas bows are silent, (walkers, people in the area can hear) Firearms are traceable but bows, as unlicensed items, would not be which also means AGS know who is hunting deer with firearms but not with bows.
Grizzly 45 wrote: » ......... when you meet lads who go bird hunting and drop pheasants on the wing with a bow than some people with a shotgun...
Cass wrote: » There is the reason we don't hunt birds with rifles, or Bows. A shotgun has a very limited danger zone compared to a rife. As buckshot it spreads quickly and has a very short effective range. While a Bow/arrow will not have the same range as a rifle you have a single, large, projectile and i for one wouldn't be comfortable with it being shot into the air. What goes up and all that.
Feisar wrote: » I should have said my actual knowledge of bow hunting amounts to SFA, in fact less than that, zero. I do question if my negative bias stems from it being illegal? Similar to years ago having a few pints and driving was fine however I would see it as morally wrong now.
Feisar wrote: » I do question if my negative bias stems from it being illegal? .
kunekunesika wrote: » As far as I know, we don't have a recent bow hunting history?????? So when they wote the legislation, it probably wasn't so much to ban something that was happening? but to prevent something that might happen in the future??? If it hadn't be banned, how may of us would have chanced our arm with our own crued versions of bows??? ( think pre internet days??? ) So, it save an awful lot of un-nessecary suffering. Could it be done now, with the equipment that is available and easy access to information....absolutely. Was it a big thing in the states, (for deer) before the advent of the modern bows? Do you mean compound bows and other High tech/Low tech devices? Ralph "papa" Bear is considered the driving force to bring it into the 20th century using the longbow built with modern materials It was always there in some shape or form, mostly practised by the Ameican Indians, but it took off in the mid 6os with the compound bow, interestingly made popular by William Shatner [Capt Kirk] on a Star Trek episode, where Kirk uses one in one episode, which gave the World its first glance of the compound bow. Shatner was /is an avid bow hunter BTW too. It came around the time that BP hunting was coming into popularity as well,and people wanted more of a challenge in hunting than just dropping game with high power rifles and had to work for it abit more.
Was it a big thing in the states, (for deer) before the advent of the modern bows?
cookimonster wrote: » K This stopped individuals taking something for the pot. Why not introduce either a license and tag as seen with fish or a limited as seen in other jurisdictions. If we were / are right on this ban the question must be asked as how come many other countries are reinstating bow hunting?
cookimonster wrote: » Not debating head shots to chest shots more so highlight the fact that even with good bullet placement death is not instantaneous.
Re aiming those that I know that have bow hunted even with high tech pin sights said they found it easier to come up on target, hold point of aim and release then doing similar hunting with fire arms. I would from my limited experience with archery a kin it to snap shooting during rough shooting or shooting active targets.
Take a few hours and watch a good few bow hunting vids with the warts and all footage, then make your mind up.
tudderone wrote: » But arrows don't kill by kinetic energy, they kill by blood loss. The arrow head has blades on it that cut major arteries.
When the animal is struck it bolts off leaving a massive blood trail, which the hunter follows after a short period of time.
When you consider that deer were only shot by arrows for thousands of years, firearms only being on the scene for a relatively short time, you would imagine there would be some way of doing it here.
Cass wrote: » Is that every time?
tudderone wrote: » As far as i know yes. The arrow is not intended to knock the deer over after doing huge damage to the carcass like a rifle bullet does, the arrow, even a crossbow arrow (bolt) simply doesn't have the power to do that. The arrow uses broad heads, that cut major veins, letting it bleed out. Its not as gruesome as it sounds, and i was watching an old boy on youtube shooting a deer with a rifle recently, it bolted after being shot and ran a few hundred yards bleeding out.
GolfVI wrote: » While this is the case for larger game, the use of blunt heads is very common for smaller animals like rabbits and squirrels. The blunt head has no point and simply kills the animal by force of impact.
tudderone wrote: » ........... and i was watching an old boy on youtube shooting a deer with a rifle recently, it bolted after being shot and ran a few hundred yards bleeding out.
Cass wrote: » Nor am i debating the merits of bow hunting to rifle shooting, or least not trying to. All i'm saying is a 500gr arrow from a bow moving at 250fps has about 70ft/lb of energy. A bullet from a 308 has 2500 ft/lb of energy.
tudderone wrote: » But arrows don't kill by kinetic energy, they kill by blood loss. The arrow head has blades on it that cut major arteries. When the animal is struck it bolts off leaving a massive blood trail, which the hunter follows after a short period of time. When you consider that deer were only shot by arrows for thousands of years, firearms only being on the scene for a relatively short time, you would imagine there would be some way of doing it here.
yubabill wrote: » With large animals, you have to wait for a few minutes after the hit, let them run (it's best if they don't know you're there at all - less adrenaline). Then you try to track and that's the hard part. Many times there is no blood trail, contrary to many writers and tracking techniques vary wildly, but apparently the oldest way is the surest - let your feet blindly follow the trail with the least resistance. ."
yubabill wrote: » Siegfried Farnon (can't remember the actor's name) wrote a brilliant book called "The Longbow" and I never forgot part of it -