- Jun 20, 2011
- 2,167
- 1,354
I took a week off work (aka rutcation) and hunted hard all week. It has been unseasonably cold with lows in the teens and highs reaching about 30 where I was hunting. I had a shot at a decent buck but missed. After a few minutes of WTF just happened I noticed the nock of my arrow was still attached to my bow string. I've never had that happen before and I use the same batch of arrows all the time during practice. I'm shooting gold tips. I have a few questions for you guys.
1. Could this have effected my shot or did I just miss?
2. Short of gluing the nocks, is there any way to keep this from happening? I've thought about maybe taking a drill bit and opening up the nock so it doesn't snap onto the string as tight. Perhaps the serving on the string is thicker than normal?
3. Could the cold weather have caused this?
thanks guys.
1. Could this have effected my shot or did I just miss?
2. Short of gluing the nocks, is there any way to keep this from happening? I've thought about maybe taking a drill bit and opening up the nock so it doesn't snap onto the string as tight. Perhaps the serving on the string is thicker than normal?
3. Could the cold weather have caused this?
thanks guys.