|
Post by tickman1961 on Oct 20, 2009 15:54:11 GMT -5
I'm not exactly sure but I think the lighted knocks are illegal as well you might want to look that one up though. They are illegal if you are wanting to enter a buck in the P & Y. Indiana has no law against them.. The major reason I feel P & Y are nothing but a bunch of elitist...
|
|
|
Post by Decatur on Oct 20, 2009 17:01:40 GMT -5
The major reason I feel P & Y are nothing but a bunch of elitist...[/quote] Aren't all deer record book clubs? "Hey, look how big the deer I killed is you peons! You wish you were as good as me!"
|
|
|
Post by varmint101 on Oct 20, 2009 19:39:53 GMT -5
Lighted nocks are legal xmax. At least, I've never seen anything to the contrary.
Sorry you lost your buck, but I know I would be out there again looking. Bad thing about the rage is it could have went in and came out some and folded back in on itself and never cut again due to the design.
|
|
|
Post by derslayer1 on Oct 22, 2009 6:36:49 GMT -5
Lighted nocks are NOT illegal
|
|
|
Post by buster on Oct 22, 2009 8:56:06 GMT -5
In my opinion broadheads get blamed far too often when shot placement is the reason the deer gets away. I shoot rocky mountain snypers 2 blade which are getting hard to find since they quit making them and I haven't lost a deer in probably 7 years. I believe the rage is basically the same head. I haven't always had the best bloods trails but I have found deer that I would have never thought I would. Like the time when I had one run into the corn with no blood trail. Walked the rows of corn and found the deer. Another time I had like one drop of blood, left without the deer and thought I better go back and just started walking the way the deer went and eventually found it on a trail. I believe the reason for my success over the past years has been that with the expandables my arrow hits where I want it to. I used to shoot muzzys. Also, I am only shooting 60 lbs. There isn't a single broadhead on the market that hasn't cripped a deer in which the hunter hasn't found. It happens to EVERY kind of broadhead, fixed blades and expandables. Shot placement is everything, and we have ALL released an arrow that didn't go exactly where we wanted it to. Stay after it, your buck is there somewhere. The grid pattern is the way to cover the area and find your buck.
|
|
|
Post by Decatur on Oct 22, 2009 9:06:28 GMT -5
Lighted nocks are NOT illegal Yes they are legal! If you have info to the contrary, please post it.
|
|
|
Post by Woody Williams on Oct 22, 2009 9:10:59 GMT -5
Lighted nocks are NOT illegal [/size] [/quote] Yes they are legal! If you have info to the contrary, please post it.[/quote] I think that you mis-read his post..
|
|
|
Post by Decatur on Oct 22, 2009 9:15:24 GMT -5
How so?
|
|
|
Post by Woody Williams on Oct 22, 2009 9:29:00 GMT -5
LOL.. maybe I am mis-reading
derslayer1 wrote:
Lighted nocks are NOT illegal
Which means that they ARE LEGAL.
To which you posted –
Yes they are legal! If you have info to the contrary, please post it.
You both are saying the same thing, so I just wondered about the “If you have info to the contrary, please post it” unless that was directed towards another poster??
|
|
|
Post by Decatur on Oct 22, 2009 9:34:51 GMT -5
LMAO! I didn't even notice that! I guess I need to slow down and actually READ the words! Thanks Woody, and please disregard my comment DERSLAYER1! Too funny!
|
|