The other guy was just not willing to put the time in. One had been in a hunting accident as a youth and I don’t believe could draw a bow. We hunted in Argentina with two guys using a crossbow. What I’m against is a Person who has never shot a bow, picking up a crossbow and going into the woods during archery season and hunting. I have no issues with a person such as yourself using a X-bow during archery season. This year I may have to go to a hand crank to be able to use the crossbow as at 67 years of age, pulling the rope pully is getting painful and I don't want the replacement shoulder joint he said was coming next. I asked about shooting a bow and he just shook his head. I asked when I could start weights and he told me those days are over. The surgeon repaired what he could of the cuff and relocated the bicep tendons (long and short head) down my humorous about 1" from the head of the bone. When my right bicep tendon started to tear off of the shoulder attachment points and the rotator cuff had progressed to where I couldn't sleep on my right side, had to get a zipper put in my shoulder. Anything above that weight and there would be an audible pop that hurt like heck and alerted the deer to my location. I did lots of physical therapy and shot several times a week for months to get back up to 60# draw weight. I used my compound after my first Orthoscopic rotator cuff repair. Just curious as to what your option of an upper limb disability is. The weapon has a rifle stock and in most cases an optic…it goes against what archery seasons were originally created for. Im not a fan of crossbows during archery season unless a person has an upper limb disability that prevents them from drawing a compound bow.
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