A little while ago I posted some of the new arrows I'm shooting. Among them were six or so overspined arrows with tall feathers. Being so "economically" made, I've enjoyed shooting them a great deal without the same fear of losing or breaking one; a fear that I always have when practicing with the carefully spined hunting shafts.
Anyway, the more I shoot them, the more I'm beginning to really get into them. So far I've shot them from several bows of varying weights and degrees of centershot with no problems (lighter bows need a little more cant- understandable, and for a hunter, perfectly acceptable).
The only downsides I can see to them are that they do drop a little more (about 3-6" more at fifty yards, and they seem to bottom rapidly at a little beyond sixty yards) and the extra whooshing. They seem at times to be a little less forgiving of shooting errors, but truth be told I'm not really sure.
They've gotten me to thinking about their versatility though, and I began to wonder how they'd work for hutning. Since most of my hunting is under 30 yards anyway, their little extra drop wouldn't pose as much of an issue as the noise and the possibility of poor flight with broadheads. So I tested one with a Zwickey and found it to fly perfectly. As for the noise, I remembered in
The Witchery of Archery how Will and Maurice used full height goose wing feathers on their arrows with no issue (though they didn't take as many deer and other big game as they took birds). So, I figured they must work to some degree.
More than that, I could use one set of good, reliable hunting arrows from any of the bows we have on the rack and expect reliable accuracy. As an example of how well they work, I gave my brother my bow and arrows and told him to try my old shooting tab. He dropped three arrows into a three inch group at 22 yards.
I'm working on some new trade points, thanks to Little John's encouragement, and might see how some of these "quasi-primitive" arrows do for hunting. I'm just rather excited about the whole thing as I'd never really heard much about the potential of this sort of arrow- just stiff with slightly taller feathers (flu flus have always seemed to be disregarded as serious shooters). Sorry for the rant
.