Figuring yardage from treestand
PhillyB
8/1/10 12:26pm
On Saturday, l was able to put up my treestand. Unfortunately I was unable to take my bow with me and practice from the stand in the field.
I figured i would be able to use the Pythagorean Theorem, a^2+b^2=c^2, to figure out the distance. I have both the distance from the ground and to my mark, essentially the A & B of the formula.
When I ran the numbers through the formula, the distances came out the same as if the shot was being taken on flat ground.
From the ground to bow height is 14ft. I had trees marked at 20 yds, 25 yds, 30 yds, etc... but according to what I figured there is no difference between using my pins from the ground or tree stand.
Any thoughts, or is it that, at 14ft, there is not enough of a change in degrees and angle, to affect arrow flight?
I figured i would be able to use the Pythagorean Theorem, a^2+b^2=c^2, to figure out the distance. I have both the distance from the ground and to my mark, essentially the A & B of the formula.
When I ran the numbers through the formula, the distances came out the same as if the shot was being taken on flat ground.
From the ground to bow height is 14ft. I had trees marked at 20 yds, 25 yds, 30 yds, etc... but according to what I figured there is no difference between using my pins from the ground or tree stand.
Any thoughts, or is it that, at 14ft, there is not enough of a change in degrees and angle, to affect arrow flight?
4,690
I appreciate you taking the time to figure that out for me. I am interested to see what you find. Tomorrow after work l am planning on setting up a makeshift-redneck stand (ladders/boards/bricks) on my side yard to see what l find...
If my scouting trips pay off and all goes "as planned" I may just get a crack at a good buck [-o<