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For most of my bowhunting career, I’ve carried a compound bow. But the very first time I toted a bow to the whitetail woods, I carried a borrowed Bear recurve. No deer were harmed on that first day, but I’ll never forget the feeling of walking into the woods with that lightweight recurve at my side.

I appreciate the speed, accuracy, and technology that modern compounds offer. You can make shots on deer with a compound that you wouldn’t dream of doing with traditional equipment. But there is something primal about hunting with a traditional bow. It’s nostalgic and draws me back to my traditional roots whenever I feel the need for a change.

Despite all the progress with modern equipment, it seems like every year more bowhunters need to scratch the traditional itch. Some make the switch permanently, while others want a new challenge for a season or two. Either way, there’s something about traditional archery that intrigues hunters.

If you’re considering making the swap to traditional archery this season, here are four reasons to make the jump.

A New Challenge

If you’ve been bowhunting for years, it’s easy to fall into a routine or even autopilot with modern compound bows. You shoot your bow all summer, dial in your effective range, and maybe you’ve experienced a decent amount of success in the deer woods. If you’re craving a new challenge, a traditional bow can deliver that.

There’s no let-off, peep sight, release aid, no rangefinders, and no sliding sight pins—just a simple stick and string. Because the shot depends more on your ability to repeat a successful process, you have to practice more intentionally than you might with a compound. Traditional archery is less about punching groups and more about building instinctive shooting skills.

That challenge doesn’t stop at the range either. The limited range of traditional archery forces hunters to get uncomfortably close to game. This forces you to develop better woodsmanship and sharper scouting skills to create more precise shot opportunities. You’ll look at the woods differently when your max range shrinks to 20 yards. Every trail, pinch point, and bedding area becomes an opportunity to close the distance.

Simplify Your Setup

Modern bowhunting sometimes feels more like managing equipment than hunting. Unless you buy a ready-to-hunt bow, you’ll need to buy sights, a release, maybe a stabilizer, quiver, rangefinder, dampeners, and the list goes on. None of these things are bad. They all serve a purpose, but compound bows have a lot of moving pieces and some you don’t even need.

Traditional archery offers a refreshing alternative. Most recurves and longbows are incredibly simple. No moving parts, extra gadgets, or excessive tuning. You simply grab your bow, a handful of arrows, and head for the woods.

There’s a certain freedom that comes with simplicity. Instead of worrying about whether your sight got bumped or if you remembered your release, you can focus on the hunt itself. You become more connected to the experience and less dependent on equipment.

You’re Tired of Your Heavy Bow

You don’t realize how heavy compound bows can get until you’re several miles back on a hunt. By the time you add a sight, quiver, stabilizer, arrows, and other accessories, it’s not uncommon for a hunting bow to weigh eight to ten pounds or more. That might not seem like much until you have to carry it all day through the mountains.

Traditional bows offer a dramatically lighter alternative. Many recurves and longbows weigh just two to three pounds. Even with a quiver, you’re often carrying less than half the weight of a fully outfitted compound setup.

For elk hunters covering miles of mountain country, public-land deer hunters navigating rough terrain, or anyone who enjoys spot-and-stalk hunting, a lighter bow can make a noticeable difference. Less weight means less fatigue, more mobility, and more enjoyment during long days in the field. Sure, you’re trading that weight for effective archery range, but if you prefer to hunt close to your game, it’s probably worth it.

The author with a nice buck. Brodie Swisher

Every Hunt Means More

When compound hunters swap to traditional, their definition of success usually changes too. It’s easy to focus on a certain class of deer with a compound bow. But when you carry a traditional bow, every successful hunt feels like a huge accomplishment.

If you think a mature buck is a trophy, try shooting any deer with a traditional bow. The rush and accomplishment of shooting a doe or small buck with a stick and string is hard to beat. My first trad bow kill was a spike. I thought I had accomplished something that day, walking out of the woods with a longbow in one hand and dragging that little buck with the other.

A squirrel, rabbit, or grouse all feel like a trophy when you’ve got a trad bow in your hand. Traditional archery has a way of shifting the focus away from antler measurements and toward the overall hunting experience.

Final Thoughts

Switching from a compound bow to a traditional bow isn’t for everyone. It requires patience and consistent practice. You’ll have to shrink your effective range and be okay with passing deer that you probably could have shot with a compound. It requires a steeper learning curve, but that’s part of what makes it so rewarding when you arrow an 80-pound doe. You may not shoot as many animals, but you might just rediscover why you became a bowhunter in the first place. And that’s a trade worth considering.

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6 Comments

  1. Interesting update on Why You Should Swap Your Compound for A Trad Bow This Season. Looking forward to seeing how this develops.

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