Rifle Scopes LRF for Bowhunting

hydro556

Gunny Sergeant
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Minuteman
Dec 1, 2007
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STL, home of the Cardinals.
I have a pair of Leica Geovids in 8x42 with the built in 1300 yard LRF. I love it, but I am wanting something very compact and light fr bowhunting.

I would like something like the Leica CRF as far as optics, but I only need an accurate 60 yard range finder. I dont think I have ever seen one. Does anyone make one or am I stuck with either over spending or buying poor quality?
 
Re: LRF for Bowhunting

Just throwing out 2 cents... If you get your range finder, cool. If your hunting from a tree stand, you can mark out key spots to quickly judge distance when you get a deer to wander into your spot and make for a quick shot. If your not in a stand, it's sort of 50/50 that you'll have the time to range the deer, then ready an arrow without the deer seeing your movement. There are ways around all that and I'm sure technology will persevere as it always has. But don't let yourself skimp out on Instinctive shooting. If your sites get knocked loose or off on the hike, if your range finder breaks, if you don't have the time... your going to have some problems. Modern archery with glow sights and the peep, you learn to shoot a bow much like a rifle. Once the sights are dead on, it's a pretty simple point and shoot (so long as you keep proper form.) Even if your sights were to break on your rifle, iron sighting with the gun isn't all that different from the scope, so long as the target is fairly close. But with a bow, it's very different.

I used to throw a hatchet a lot when I was a kid. I spent a lot of time marking out "1 turn, 2 turn" marks as I threw at a stump. I got to the point where I was able to make it stick every time, out to 3 turns. Then the aim came over time. 2 turns (about 18 feet with the hatchets I was using) I could keep it in a cigarette pack sized area. At 3 turns, around a dinner plate. Thing was, if I walked out into the woods with my hatchet, my marks didn't come with me. I had to best-guess my range at trees as I wander around and spent a lot of time chasing the hatchet. Over time, it got to the point where I could just look at a tree, and *know* that it's 2 turns away, or maybe a little more than 2, but not 3. So I'd either need to hike back on the handle a bit or step back a little. I got pretty good with it, and was comfortable sinking it in pretty much every throw, at unfamiliar targets from unfamiliar ranges.

Archery can be somewhat the same. Learn instinctive shooting, and you'll be able to sink the stick wherever you want, whenever you want. I'm not saying to not go out and get a range finder. Just... don't sell your own God-givin skills to use a tool thats been around for 30,000 years before it was ever given sights.

Never heard of a bowhunter talking about a ranger finder, so felt compelled to throw me 2 cents out. Hope it helps, hope it doesn't offend.
 
Re: LRF for Bowhunting

Doesnt offend me. But most bowhunters I know use LRFs. Apparently Nikon even makes a line dedicated to bowhunters.

Once you get out past 25 yards, a 5 yard error in judgment is a miss or worse.

I agree with you on instinctive shooting.
 
Re: LRF for Bowhunting

Cool, I've offended a few people on the forums with my 2 cents and I'm a new guy lol. I didn't know about the LRF's from Nikon. Your definitely right about the 5 yard error. I think the main thing I would want help with would be finding the range with being up in a tree. Taking into account the elevation and all that. Usually what I'd do, is spot key areas around my stand, then pace-count from tree stand to those areas. Anyway, keep us in touch on how your LRF works out!
 
Re: LRF for Bowhunting

I do most of my practice from my back deck. The floor is 14' above the target. So it is good practice. Most guys dont get enough practice from an elevated shooting position.

I dont find a lot of difference in the 15 to 25 yard range, but the close shots are definitely different. I shoot with 3 pins. 10, 15 and 20 yards. They are calibrated from my deck. That is why I want to be able to range.

I am going to use my Leicas for now, but they are such overkill and dont work with the plan to pack light.