A slingshot can be very helpful in many bowhunting situations such as diverting a deer’s attention; rousting a deer from heavy brush; hunting small game; strengthening your arms; and improving your aim. Shooting a slingshot improves your hand/eye coordination as well, and can be practiced almost anywhere. Plus, it’s really fun! Formal targets are great and easy to build, but informal targets–cans, leaves, anthills, etc. are found everywhere. Just like bows, you’ll probably want more than one slingshot!
Slingshots are readily available from many places and reasonably priced; however, they are also very easy to make at home. Slingshots come in a variety of sizes, take up little space, and there are many types of projectiles available for ammunition. If you make your own slingshot, you may choose the crotch (the forked stick), the style of the pouch, and the length and strength of the elastic band. Natural crotches can be made from ash and maple trees or saplings. Any tree with opposite (as contrasted with alternate) branching will work. You can also make one out of a board, a heavy-duty plastic cutting board, or a piece of PVC pipe.
Elastic bands for slingshots used to come from red inner tubes, but now the choices are usually latex tubing or flat bands. Latex tubing comes in various wall thicknesses and diameters. Flat bands come in different strengths based on color and/or thickness. You can make them the length and the strength (width) that is best for you. A little experimentation will go a long way. The weight, size and style of the slingshot is a personal decision.
Anything that will fit into the pouch will work as ammunition. You can buy ammunition such as marbles, lead balls and bullets, or paint balls; or you can make your own from rocks, acorns, pecans, crab apples or taconite (flint-like rocks). If you have the equipment, you can cast your own lead bullets and balls or you can make them from potter’s clay or clay from the ground. The list goes on and on. Paint balls are a really fun type of ammo. They are biodegradable, durable, a good size to shoot, and they make a terrific mark on the target. Acorns and pecans are not very heavy, nor do they fly very straight for long distances. When they hit something fairly hard, they disintegrate and go back into the soil. However, they can be used where accuracy and momentum are not important as for example, to get a deer’s attention, turn its direction, make it focus on an unknown, or scare it out of hiding.
Shooting a bow and shooting a slingshot go hand in hand. You may want to consider the right slingshot and ammo as an addition to your regular hunting equipment. It will fit right into your backpack, pocket, or vehicle. Give it your best shot…you may be surprised.
Stan Geisz commented: Please delete the “bottles” as appropriate targets for slingshots, unless the shooter has a foolproof way to capture all the shards and pieces. Thanks.
Stan, I will delete that from the article.
Brings back memories of making them as a kid! Always used a forked hickory branch, inner tube & leather. Small stones always available!
This was 70 years ago!
I keep a slingshot in my backpack and have used it to both divert and to stop deer from getting too far away. If you haven’t tried it, you’ll be suprised at the results. Give it a try while you’re out scouting pre-season.
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Be Ware!! Slingshots are illegal in New Jersey and maybe elsewhere . So before you take that trip down memory lane make sure you don’t get a fine or worst!
Don’t forget regular old BBs. 4 or 5 in the pouch will give a shotgun effect. Cheap and readily available.
Correcting an above comment, slingshots are not illegal per se in NJ. They are illegal if carried without a reasonable explanation. The law is unclear about what this actually means and a police officer will make the decision as to whether your explanation is acceptable if you are confronted. If it isn’t and you are convicted, it’s a 4th degree crime, I believe, and you face up to 18 months in a state prison and/or a $10,000 fine. NJ also does not recognize the 2nd Amendment and has serious restrictions against carry knives including run of the mill pocket knives. The law is nebulous on this point also, so if you carry any type of knife in NJ or anything else that can be construed as a weapon you run a risk. NJ is clearly one of the worst states in the US to live in.
Are you aware of the fact that it is against the law to own a slingshot in the Soviet state of N.J. ?
Thanks for the fun read! It is well-written with neat, artistically arranged images. You crafted some dandy looking slingshots, ‘Shooters’ or whatever they are called… Thank you!
NJ definitely likes to put a damper on the good times. On the bright side we have a long archery deer season, as well as shotgun and muzzle loader. Also small game, turkey and for the time being bear. Can’t hunt with a center fire rifle except maybe wood chucks. Muzzle loaders are legal and at the typical shot distances they do just fine. And then there is tons of fishing available, streams, lakes, ponds, bay, surf and ocean.
My business is here so not going anywhere for awhile but I definitely keep busy with outdoor fun. The sling shot law is just plain silly.
As for using bottles for targets the most common bottles anymore are plastic. I have some hanging in the trees in my yard and shoot at them with flu-flu blunts and also with my slingshot. Sorry for the grainy video.
https://youtu.be/VINLEUa-O4I
Another use For my slingshot is launching a lead sinker with a length of paracord attached over a limb so I can hang my bee swarm traps.
Just make sure you can carry a slingshot legally – you can’t in New Jersey. Yep, in New Jersey its a felony to carry a slingshot.
“Slingshots are considered per se dangerous weapons under Title 2c – The New Jersey Code Of Criminal Justice Section 2C:39-3(e), making the possession, sale or transport of any type of slingshot without an “explainable lawful purpose” a felony of the fourth degree.”
I have no desire to even travel through New Hersey much less live there. Same goes for a few more states.