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Started by Dtrkyman, April 23, 2021, 08:52:11 AM
Quote from: howl on April 24, 2021, 09:35:05 PMNot sure you could call it an accident since they worked together to put themselves in a position for it to happen. A tragedy for sure in any case. The shooter probably pulled the trigger without making a conscious decision to. Awful lot of bows get dry fired that way. I hope he never realizes it if he did.Drawing a bow pointed at someone is like pointing a loaded gun at them with the safety off. Pointing the gun is probably safer.
Quote from: Swenny on April 24, 2021, 07:50:08 PMThe man killed was a guy I knew and spent time with as a student, and the person who killed him is his son whom I also know and work with.Was at his memorial service last week, I'm not just saying this out of respect to the departed, Mark was one of the best people I've ever met and known. The idea that his son, whom is also a fantastic person, is the person who accidentally misfired. . . I'm not eloquent enough to put the tragedy of it into words.For the purposes of learning from accidents for all my fellow hunters, and not from a sense of gossip my understanding is that Mark and his son were crawling through grass single file, his son went to draw (I assume he was going to crouch up to his knees) when his bow trigger caught on something and he misfired into his dad's back.Please, please, please be careful. This entire family has spent their lives hunting and fishing, it's what they do. If this can happen to them. . . It can happen to absolutely anyone. People who scoff at safety in the field aren't anyone I want to be anywhere close to.If you're the religious type say a prayer for Mark's family and especially his son who is due to get married soon, and if you're not a religious person send them mental regards.Sent from my SM-G986U using Tapatalk