I was fortunate enough to grow up in central Virginia in a very rural area in a family full of people who loved the outdoors. Surrounded by national forest, I spent most of my free time wandering the hardwoods and stalking brook trout and smallmouth bass in the streams and rivers. My first firearm was a single shot .410 that my father said I could take out when I was strong enough to thumb the hammer back. That day finally came about the age of twelve and off I went down a path that has taken me over many hills. I still haven’t reached the end.
A love for the outdoors and for hunting comes from different places for different people. For me it was all we talked about at the family dinner table. Other people come into the hunters fold from other directions, influenced by friends, books or an intrinsic curiosity with the natural world and our connection to it. For me it was the .410 and the stands of white oak and hickory I stalked looking for grey squirrels. In a few years the .410 was replaced with a 20 gauge and I walked the timber with eyes on the ground looking for turkey sign, a box call sticking out of the pocket of the army surplus fatigue jacket I had found at the thrift store. In high school I acquired a .270 and the opening of deer season became every holiday wrapped up in one. It wasn’t until I moved to Iowa to attend graduate school that a friend introduced me to bow hunting. He had a Bear compound bow and it didn’t take long before I had one too. His family owned a farm in northwest Iowa and I was soon infatuated with the intensity and personal nature of hunting with a bow. There was something magical about sitting in a tree stand while the forest awakened before slipping down to still hunt the edges of the corn fields and woodlots. I killed my first deer with a bow as it stepped from the standing corn into the open. The stand I’d chosen was hidden behind a cottonwood tree fifteen yards away. I was shaking so hard I could barely draw the bow. I think I may have closed my eyes when I released the arrow but, somehow, my arrow found it’s mark. My friend killed another buck that same morning and somewhere in a box at home there is a slightly out of focus picture of us sitting on the tailgate of a pickup grinning like jack o’ lanterns with the two deer between us.
My path then led me to Idaho and the gigantic scale and majesty of the intermountain west. I bought myself a better compound bow and used the skills I had developed since childhood to hunt elk for the first time. The learning curve was steep but I was confident in my woodcraft and I was soon successful. I would try to explain to friends and family back east the unbelievable rush of calling in a rutting bull elk but words can never do that justice. It’s just one of those things you’ve got to experience firsthand. For me it is an experience that grabs you by your very essence and grounds you to the Earth like nothing else. I have been bow hunting elk for fifteen years now and the connection it gives me to my primal being has not faded at all.
A few years ago I ran into some guys that were traditional bow hunters. I was intrigued by chasing deer and elk with those simple and elegant weapons. For me, the attraction was in the simplicity, a further distillation of the hunting experience unencumbered by the perfected trivia that so pervades the modern hunting culture. I did some reading and research but time caught up with me and when elk season rolled around, I grabbed the compound bow. Recently, I borrowed a recurve from one of my friends and took it home to try out. I cleanly missed the target from twelve yards, sending the arrow into the wheatgrass where it was soon joined by its siblings, a far cry from the mechanical lethality of my compound. I got some instruction from my friends and soon I was hitting the arrow stop, my groups getting tighter. I took a few steps back from the target and the wheatgrass claimed another victim; this was going to take a commitment. It was apparent I’d be learning to shoot a bow all over again. No peep sight, no release, no let off, no nothing. A bent stick, a string, me and a target. It is both simple and complex like life and death and all things in between. I was at a crossroads. I looked over my shoulder to see where I had come from, then looked forward and thought about where each fork may lead. What is more meaningful and rewarding? Where we go or how we get there? I walked into the wheatgrass to look for my arrow. I had chosen my path.
Author Bio
Chuck Boggs was raised in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia and spent his youth hunting and fishing in its rolling hardwood forests. At the age of twelve, after volunteering with the state fish and game agency, he decided to pursue a career as a fisheries biologist. This decision led him to the Midwest for his undergraduate and graduate degrees before landing him in north Idaho where he has worked as a fisheries biologist for the University of Idaho for the last twenty years. An experienced outdoorsman, Chuck has logged many hours in the western US conducting fisheries research, chasing big game and trying to keep up with his bird dogs. This professional and personal passion for the wild edge has provided Chuck with extensive knowledge and experience in wildlife ecology and wilderness travel, hunting and safety.
A note from Clay: if you’re new to traditional bowhunting, or are thinking about making the switch from compound to trad, check out the Professional Bowhunters Society. They’re a group of hardcore, dedicated bowhunters that are happy to help. And don’t forget to check out the audio file at the top of the post.
Awesome love it
I love to hear stories like this, men and women who are returning to their roots.Searching for something that has more meaning to them. I will be visiting my father who lives in North Carolina this September and will be bow hunting together for the very first time. We both shoot recurve and i honestly have not looked forward to something so much in my entire life. Thanks for the great story, its always awesome to hear other peoples journeys
One more down and a bunch more to go. Welcome to the dark side brother. LOL.
I haven’t ordered the book yet maybe today.
Great blog! Love reading stories like this!!
A really great story. Chuck I am glad you made the switch from those machines to the real bows that have over 10,000 years of tradition. Welcome aboard brother. Clay as always another great post. God Bless and Be Blessed.
Best Southern Regards,
Van
Traditional bows aren’t for everyone, but for those that are up to the challenge they will grab your soul like nothing you have ever done before. Welcome to a life long journey!
There is something mystical between a string, a bent piece of wood, and a stick that can not be explained or understood, and that no slow motion camera will ever be able to capture.
Great to hear that another hunter is embracing traditional archery! I too started with a Matthews Bow, a fine machine. I changed to a recurve many years ago and never looked back.
Traditional is a different world. An entirely different experience. More intimate, challenging and requires much more self control. My favorite aspect is the length of time I am watching the animal. You see so much between that time between the first broadside at 60 yards, and that ethical traditional shot at 15. I’d rather leave the forest without an animal than leave home without my longbow.
As for resources, some folks find the PBS to be elitist and cliquey. Compton Traditional Archers is more low key. ETAR in Penn each July is a wonderful place to meet other trad archers. Have fun.
Awesome read! Clay, I too just started shooting a recurve last January, and already hooked! Expect to “case that compound” in a year or less. Watched your shooting style video and trying that. Loved your book and recent videos as well. The great outdoors……is GREAT!
Right there with you. Just made the switch from the manufactured precision of a compound to the zen and simplicity of my recurve. It’s humbling and exciting all at the same time.
Very inspiring, Chuck! Thank you for sharing out to us 😉
Guys, I’ve been in archery since the mid-60’s. I switched to compounds in 1975 and and 5 months into a committed transition back to recurves. I have always felt that after God and family, bowhunting has been the most important thing in my life. I had no idea, as much as I have loved archery with my compounds, what a tremendous positive and exciting journey the past 5 months have been. I can’t remember being more excited about archery than I am these days! My 31-year old son, who as always been a compound shooter, is making the move with me. If you have made this switch or are making it, how is it going?
my story is also similar,,, 61 years old. Shot a recurve up until the early 70s. About 6 years ago I returned to archery with a compound and learned to shoot that fairly well. Never stopped thinking about the recurve and bought one last fall. Started the learning process in January and thanks to this site, have made steady progress. I still have a way to go before I feel comfortable hunting with it but I am enjoying trad archery more than ever. wish I would have done this years ago.
It’s great to hear you’re having such a good time Lawrence! Chuck sold his compound a wile back and is all trad now. He’s shooting quite well after finding a bow in the 45# range with matched arrows. ch
Great post, really interesting read…Thank you for what you are sharing very helpful!