Resortera is the name we use in Mexican culture for a Slingshot, so this is my blog about Resorteras as my style and traditions in slingshots are from Mexico.
Many aspects of the Resortera will be covered as time allows, keep in mind I am a hunter so a lot of what I teach is based on using the slingshot for hunting. Even still if you shoot targets you could learn something from my blogs.
Warning and legal disclaimer: This blog post is about sharing hunting traditions from the various parts of our Great USA. It is exploring past traditions, sharing their practices for this Autumn season and showing the younger generation that hunting to fill the pot (to eat) is not about the killing an animal for bragging rights or to pretend you're the great white hunter. This blog post does not encourage the reader to pursue potentially protected bird species in your respective state. As always check your state laws before pursuing any small game species and for God's sake please make sure it really is a pest causing depredation to your property. Don't just shoot the poor critter because you think its an invasive and you encountered it in the wild and think you are doing your part rid the habitat of these invasive species. Remember some of these animals have thrived despite mass eradication campaigns by our great government and its doubtful you will save the eco system with a handful of marbles and your slingshot. On the other hand you can always become a part of the food chain and encourage others towards a healthy approach to hunting.
Bird Hunting Traditions of Autumn Harvest time
This blog post was inspired when I was helping my wife to put together Halloween and Autumn Harvest greeting cards, my dear wife had various decorative stickers that she likes to put on the outside of the envelopes. In these various stickers I found two images that inspired me to do some of my own research. I have always said that Art is very often an expression of life i.e. "art imitates life" etc. I found a harvest pumpkin that had a curious looking blackbird and it had some red lines in its wings, another sticker had a solid blackbird next to a harvest basket of apples.
This made me wonder? Was the artist in their clever way sharing with us something that is not so accepted in our modern day?
We live in a time of drive thru fast food and the internet and many modern conveniences that the younger generations have taken their own history for granted.
Yet here in art work there is a possibility of a tradition from the past!
I did some research and my diligence paid off as I found several references alluding to a tradition of hunting Blackbirds during the harvest season to be eaten as food. Yes you heard it right hunted as a food source.
Traditions born of necessity
The first thing I did was look into black birds with red wings obviously the red wing blackbird was the first to come forward and in my search I read that these birds are often an agricultural pest due to their fondness of grain and that during the Harvest season these blackbirds and other blackbird species were/are known to raid the grain where rice fields are, or the corn fields in the Midwest and this is where there is a strong tradition.
It is not uncommon from times past for farmers in the states where the most grain is farmed to have controlled these raiding blackbirds during the harvest season and use these very birds as a food source. In essence this was double harvest for a poor farmer in times past when food was more scarce. Noted is the fact that many farmers probably used a scatter gun to mass control/harvest these blackbirds.
But let us not forget that kids growing up on a farm in a poorer era would have been using a slingshot to help their parents control some of these blackbirds and these too were contributed to the pot.
Further evidence to a tradition of slingshot hunting blackbirds for food is found in an old Backwoodsman Magazine article in which a contributor by the name of Jackie Clay wrote that she'd hunted blackbirds with a slingshot to fill the pot.
Notably in my youth in rural Mexico there were times when I was walking with my grandfather and we came across a "chanate" a species of blackbird in Mexico that was sitting on the edges of Grandfather's Maize field which he told us to shoot the birds.
I remember him telling us to save them for food as they were good and we ate these in a game medley of birds mixed in a Salsa made from tomatillos and hot peppers and fresh corn tortillas made in Native style on a metate. Was a tasty stew from what I remember.
I found a recipe for cooking Blackbirds written by a man in his 70s I believe and he said he ate these blackbirds quite often as they killed many in the harvest season and that they were just as good as any other bird. Here's a link to the recipe http://www.justapinch.com/recipes/soup/other-soup/black-bird-and-dumplings.html
I also found an old recording from an interviewee in his 90s which was recorded in the 1970s an old railroad man and farmer recalling his early childhood in the late 1800s. The link to the recording is found here http://avbarn.museum.state.il.us/viewclip/1778
Even on the other side of the Pond in the 1600s we have accounts of poor country folk in rural England that would "poach" Rooks roosting in trees with the ancestor of our slingshot the stone shooting crossbow.
Although not a true blackbird the grackle is in some states allowed to be hunted year round and would be among those grain raiders in the harvest season. If you live in a place where these interesting birds are legal to hunt/control then I consider this as a possible quarry to harvest with your slingshot this autumn season. A side of blackbird n dumplings to go with some pumpkin pie is as good as having chicken n dumplings and you have harvested something from the wild as opposed to buying a chicken that was slaughtered after living its life in a box to became a package of meat for the uninformed consumer who has no connection to his or her natural world. If you need recipes for these un touched birds there are many ways to make these.
As a kid we ate birds that were even smaller than these blackbirds, in Rural Mexico we often harvested a lot of ground doves aka inca doves and with a half dozen to a dozen of these taken in a team effort our aunt of grandmother would make use a tasty meal for the family.
My point is clear we as hunters owe the earth some gratitude for its many gifts and with this Autumn season and Harvest Thanks approaching we should embrace these traditions and not over kill the rest of our natural resources and accept graciously what nature offers and allow the rest of her resources to replenish for us to enjoy in another season.
On behalf of myself and my family I would like to wish my readers a happy Autumn and always a Happy Harvest season.
Credits:
Thanks to my wife who inspired this Autumn blog post.
Special thanks to Jamie Pleasant for the tabbed natural slingshot pictured with .44 caliber lead balls he cast himself.
A thank you to the Audio-Video Barn of the Illinois State Museum for their audio interview of the 1970s man in his 90s account of eating blackbirds in the late 1800s
A warm thank you to the man who shared his family recipe for Blackbird n Dumplings.
As anyone who knows me and my love for hunting with the venerable resortera (slingshot) knows that my favorite elastic to use for my hunting slingshots are the chained ubiquitous office rubber bands. This post is about working with the chained 64s.
A bit of a personal History:
In times past in the 1980s I largely used the red rubber bands that I acquired from the paper boy and the mail man. I call them chained as the English translation of what my uncle used to call these types of slingshot bands when he taught me their construction, in Spanish he called them cadena de ligas translation is chained rubber bands. A term I made popular for this type of slingshot band when I introduced the term in 2009 on Jacksshed UK forum, it was in 2010 that I wrote the original in print Chained band tutorial with pictures and explanations of the use of he red #32 rubber bands. However I had also learned from another older kid to use the #64 rubber bands for chains. After this I had a great back up resource for rubber bands as when the red rubber bands became more rare I would often use the #64 office rubber bands.
Because the red clay #32 rubber bands were once ubiquitous and now only sold through specialty stores that cater to rubber band guns and their ammo (rubber bands) I still use the red #32s but I just order a 1lb bag and use sparingly.
I've decided to not become dependent on the internet for my slingshot elastic resources and went with locally available #64 rubber bands.
Add Note:
Because here in the USA you can find #64 rubber bands virtually in most places that have office supplies that makes these rubber bands a local renewable resource. If you work in a place that has office supplies you can even get these for free, the local post office now uses #64s as they took the place of the old red rubber bands of the past.
The intention behind this project:
1. To get more use of a single 1/4 lb. bag of #64 rubber bands by using less rubber bands and ensuring an affordable resource of ammunition. While ensuring that the band set is viable for the harvest of small game.
2. Using projectiles that are easily acquired, renewable and effective for the harvest of small game with a slingshot.
3. Field proof of the small game harvests and understanding the limitations of this particular slingshot set up.
4. The construction of the bands tips on how I did it and what you should look for when trying this chain set up.
The project itself
My usual chained rubber band set up uses 18 #64 rubber bands to make a complete slingshot set (#64s 3x3x3), that's 3 rubber bands per link and its 3 links for one slingshot band a total of 9 rubber bands for one power band make this a pair and that's 18 rubber bands you have used from one 1/4 bag of #64 rubber bands. These chained 64s have been proven effective to game the size of a large jackrabbit and fowl the size of a pheasant or a grouse with proper shot placement.
The rubber band set up for this project
This experimental set up I have actually been casually experimenting with over the last two years is #64 2x2x2 that is 2 #64s per link in a three link chain and this is a total of 12 #64 rubber bands to make a slingshot band set. The secret is using the stiffest stretching rubber bands as these create more tension for the lighter set up and can develop more speed if shot properly.
Chaining these rubber bands is the same as in this old Video where I demonstrate using the 3x3x3
The only difference is that you are using 2 #64s per chain link that's 12 rubber bands for a complete slingshot band set.
The attachments I used for this work were the traditional resortera tied/lashed down with either rubber bands or strips of bicycle inner tubes and covered with an insulator. See the resortera picture in the beginning of this blog post for a great example of the style.
Largely due to location and availability I have used two brands of #64 rubber bands (you can use any brand, as they all work) I have employed the Alliance advantage #64s that sell for $1.28 a 1/4 bag at Walmart also closer within walking distance from my home is a Staples office supply store and I have used their Staples brand #64 rubber bands they do cost a little more at $3.25 but for the amount of bands you will make it's still economical and affordable.
Collecting plastic bottles to sell at the recycler 4 pounds worth would easily cover your costs and you recycled (eco friendly).
Initially I used the Alliance brand 64s 2x2x2 on a natural fork and then on a nice cut out a got from a friend on the forums.
The projectiles for this project
For this project I selected three projectiles which I felt would be both affordable, accessible and effective with this lighter set of chained 64s 2x2x2.
1. Cat eye marbles: These are the 5/8 cat eye marbles these are economical spherical and you can get good deals on these at a dollar store for $1.00 USD you can have 50 marbles the highest I have paid is $1.49 at a grocery store for 50 of these marbles still economical.
2. Clay balls: Whether you buy natural clay in an arts and crafts supply store for $10.00 (10 lbs yields 300 plus clay balls) or you harvest natural clay this is both an eco friendly and economically effective projectile for small game which you will see in a few moments.
3. 0000 Buck shot aka .380 (38 caliber) lead balls:
If you cast lead this would save you a lot of lead and if not you can buy these in bulk from buck shot supply gun shops.
Note: Stones are always an alternative but I did not include these for this official project due to complaints from those inexperienced in using pebbles* as a hunting projectile.
.
I will refrain from talking about foot pounds or how many feet per second this set up is shooting as I feel this is really unnecessary at the end of the day. Suffice to say it is demonstrating some serious power for so little rubber bands. Also noted the Staples brand #64s are a little heavier in pull than the Alliance advantage #64s, the Staples brand are shooting a little faster but both have the muscle to get the job done.
The field results and the brand of #64s by projectile and species of game is noted in each account.
Hunting with 0000 buck shot aka .38 caliber lead balls.
My first try was at a large pigeon at my work place (an agricultural area) using the Alliance 64s on this cut out a friend (Joey) on the forums gave me that is cut out from a skateboard. I had strapped this with the aforementioned Alliance 64s 2x2x2.
Here pictured with clay balls is the slingshot
The pigeon was 25 feet up on a bin and it took me several shots to get dialed in but in the end I connected the .38 lead ball grazed the top of this male pigeon's head so I had to finish it.
I found that this .38 lead ball can also penetrate on rodents such as Rats.
Using the staples 64s with the .38 lead rounds
As it did with this young rat that was raiding one of our fruit trees and did not realize it was being watched. You can see the entry wound on its side.
As a personal note I do believe that since these 0000 buck shot can penetrate a pigeon that if you don't care to harm the breast meat of other edible parts of your pigeons then you can try breast shots and side body shots.
Myself personally I do not like to harm the breast meat on my pigeons because I do eat them.
For me I have very specific vital areas I target on a pigeon to ensure no damage to the breast meat.
I try for crop, neck and head this, with other projectiles hitting the crop has immediate stopping power. But with these smaller 0000 buck shot you must be more precise in your shooting or target other areas that I think are inhumane personally.
I did have a few barn pigeons fly off from the smaller lead ball missing the vitals while completely passing through one pigeon and a bad hit on another big pigeon.
Rabbits? I can give no report as my shots missed, maybe an update later as I am able to hunt.
Squirrels? I missed my shots with this lighter set up and the .38 lead rounds.
So far what I have posted are the species I have taken with the 0000 buck shot but I do believe that the round is capable of the take of either rabbits or squirrels with this chained 64 lighter 2x2x2 chain.
Note: The .38 lead rounds weigh 83 grains this is 6 grains more than the next projectile not much in weight difference. Keep this in mind.
Hunting with 5/8 cat eye marbles
Back in 2014 during Autumn season in the predawn hours I shot this large male pigeon with this small resortera I made from an orange tree fork and it was powered with the Alliance advantage #64s 2x2x2 and a 5/8 cat eye marble it was roosting on the eves of a building where the owners had been having trouble with pigeons. I hit the crop on this pigeon and it came down immediately. It was twitching so I followed it up with a head shot to end any potential suffering.
I did also take a pigeon with the resortera using the staples #64s 2x2x2 the same used in the experiments mentioned earlier.
This shot was taken on a silhouette and I connected a solid head shot with the cat eye marble.
Was a tasty meal!
Noteworthy is the fact that I had weighed these 5/8 cat eye marbles on an old scale I have and they were weighing in the 5 gram range which is 77 grains occasionally they would be slightly over but were usually 77 to 80 grains. That puts these marbles within the weight of the previously mentioned 0000 buckshot or .38 lead round balls that are 83 grains.
Yet the impact to the pigeon's crop from the 5/8 cat eye marble had immediate stoppage where I shot completely through a large pigeon's crop with the .38 lead ball and the bird flew away.
How is it possible you ask that the marble had more stopping power vs the small, slightly heavier and faster .38 lead round ball??
The energy of the projectile is being distributed differently. The density of the smaller lead ball is delivering a more concentrated blow and in doing so has penetrated flesh and the shock wave is diffused and the smaller lead ball is now only effective if it impacts something vital on the way through the Pigeon's crop.
The marble with the larger striking surface delivers it's entire energy on impact. If you look at a pigeon anatomy chart you will see that the heart is below the crop and behind this is its vertebrate. The impact of the marble is delivering a shockwave to these vital organs. Its a shockwave of energy to the right place and it causes a shut down.
This phenomenon is not limited to this experimental set up. As I have had this experience with even larger lead balls and my standard 64 3x3x3 chains.
Here's a pigeon I had a pass through with a .44 lead ball on a crop shot and the account regarding its harvest. Again this pigeon did not die from the pass through of the larger lead ball. Note a .44 lead ball is 128 grains give or take.
Here's a kill with a 5/8 cat eye and a crop shot with the same set up and slingshot. This pigeon died almost instantly from the impact of the 5/8 cat eye marble at only 77 grains.
Again these other examples are only added to illustrate the difference in how the energy of a larger sized (but not always heavier) projectile is distributed vs the smaller lead ball.
But I digress and bring us back to the project with the chained 64 2x2x2 and what I have taken with marbles.
Now onto other species: Rabbits? I haven't tried for rabbits with marbles and the 64 2x2x2 but I do believe it is possible.
Squirrels? Maybe but I haven't done this to confirm. I have killed rats with the 5/8 cat eye marbles and the chained 64s 2x2x2. In the future as I am able to hunt with my busy life style I will update on these matters.
Now we must go the last projectile being used in the Less is more project.
Hunting with clay balls and 64 2x2x2 chain
I have had the pleasure of hunting successfully using baked clay balls and the chained 64s 2x2x2
Here is a pigeon I shot in an underpass of a live railroad the shot was a good connection at over 30 feet above the pigeon was hiding in the steel girders hit the crop. A nice male pigeon this was with the Alliance Advantage #64s 2x2x2 chain and a clay ball.
Another recent was a rat that I shot with this same slingshot and a clay ball some 20 feet in one of our fruit trees. The rat tried to avoid me in the heavy cover but I waited with the head lamp beam on the other side of the tree and sure as darkness it came out to where I had a clear shot. I connected on the first shot with it's ribs and it fell dead and my tabby ate the rat.
Could the chained 64s 2x2x2 take something larger than a rat?
How about a squirrel? The answer is Yes!
Here is a recent squirrel taken under pest control situation on our property where they have caused damage to our property. This also is an update which I will link back to this blog post. Here is proof and you can see for yourself that it was perfectly placed shot. This was a clean kill. This is with the staples brand #64s 2x2x2 chain
Do I feel that the clay balls propelled by the chained 64s 2x2x2 could take a rabbit?
Of course as I do not believe something can be done without having first performed said action successfully I will simply state that I believe the set-up is potentially capable of harvesting a cottontail with a clay ball. I know right now that there are some readers saying (squirrels are tougher than rabbits) so yeah this can take a rabbit. Maybe so? But not all situations are identical in the field.
For now this in the field treatise is what I have learned in working with a lighter set of chained #64 rubber bands.
So far as I can tell from a personal note, that if it were for bird hunting pigeons I would stick with the 5/8 marbles but would still do well with the .38 lead balls for pigeons and also dove sized birds as these are not as tough as barn pigeons.
The .38 lead balls would be excellent for dove sized birds in conjunction with these lighter #64 2x2x2 chain.
I think that the clay balls would be the best all around with this 2x2x2 chain for all of the mentioned game in this blog post.
Either way I have created a system with less rubber bands and three very viable and accessible projectile options for the interested user of chained office # 64 rubber bands. In a light 2x2x2 chain.
Again for the reader not reading the entire post and just skimming? This blog post has been about the limitations and potential of the chained 64s in a 2x2x2 chain with the previously mentioned three differing projectiles. It is not about the projectile itself but the combination of this particular elastic chain and the projectiles that is the point of this experiment.
Here you have a basic system with less rubber bands and they are ubiquitous rubber bands you can get almost in any office supply store near home and with three different projectiles you can use from 5/8 marbles that are economical to using 0000 buck shot to making clay ball ammo in the privacy of your home. You now have a hunting set up that is lethal in 5 to 15 yards with proper shot placement and a possible effectiveness at 20 yards.
Side notes: and alternatives to the less is more project.
If you prefer trenza style as my uncle called the loosely braided chain you can use the same amount of rubber bands or if you are a little guy with shorter arms you can use less. The difference is that you are folding over (plaiting) the rubber bands and when you fold one over they count as two strength wise.
This is the trenza equivalent of the knotted 64 2x2x2 chain, but as a trenza is 1x1x1x1x1x1
For proper trenza technique I refer you to Geko's video Mr. Geko is a noted German shooter who deserves 100% credit for reviving interest in the use of the trenza (braided chain) among western shooters.
Here's his old video from 2009 which he Posted in Melchior's forum on Slingshots the first and original forum of slingshots. Which was the first forum I visited on slingshots.
Whether you use the knotted chains as I use or you prefer the loosely braided chains you are still using chained office rubber bands and part of an old tradition of slingshot use.
Good luck hunting.
Acknowledgements:
Special thanks to Kevin on the forums who donated the large bag of .38 lead balls I used in this project which he cast himself, thanks Kevin.
Special thanks to Joey Lujan for the cool Skateboard cut out slingshot frame it has been used well, and will be used again. Thanks
A big thank you to all my readers for your support.
Foot note: *pebbles as ammo with the chained 64s 2x2x2: There is a very young hunter on the Rebel slingshot forum who used the chained 64s 2x2x2 for hunting because the usual 3x3x3 chain was too heavy pull for him and he was successful with the 2x2x2 chain and pebbles at harvesting a pigeon and he did this with not so rounded rocks/pebbles the young hunter's name is David. Here is the story http://rebelslingshotforum.freeforums.org/i-didn-t-give-chains-the-respect-they-deserve-t2993.html
Honoring past Contributors to the Sport of Slingshot hunting
In this post I want to give some acknowledgement to those individuals who have helped enrich the "sport side" of Slingshot Hunting.
Now before I continue with this blog post I want to say two things here:
1. I realize I called slingshot style hunting a "sport" now for me growing up as a child and the annual 3 months I lived with my grandparents in rural Mexico I learned that hunting with a slingshot or any other hunting tool was more a matter of necessity than a game or sport. In those times the game we took with the slingshot was a supplemental meat source to our family's diet of mainly maize, beans, and squash.
However, hunting with a slingshot is still carried out by people to add some meat to the table and because of the challenge of using such a simple projectile weapon. In this way Slingshot hunting is as much a sport of Hunting as is hunting with a bow with blunt tips for small game. Because we still hunt for the love of the challenge and the added benefit of a fine meal of natural un caged wild game meats. As an example my father who is an avid deer hunter and also was my original slingshot mentor still carries with him his homemade resortera when he is out deer hunting, and the man has many times harvested rabbits and grouse as his meal for the evening.
The wild creatures hunted with a slingshot have a higher advantage of escape vs the difference if hunted with a shotgun or a precise firearm or the modern high powered air guns.
2. By past contributors I'm referring to pre Slingshot enthusiast forum contributors and there are many out there. The reason for this blog post, then is to acknowledge these guys; simply because all those who are newly interested with slingshot hunting should know that these guys trail blazed the interest towards slingshot hunting.
Additionally I will make reference to those who have made either past articles in the pre forum era and may not be publically active yet are part of what sparked the interest in the growing slingshot enthusiast community and I will share some of our old time hunters still active to this day!
Before I continue I must personally take this time to tip my hat to those who influenced and mentored me in the practice and skill of slingshot hunting.
1. My father as he is the first person to have handed me the tradition of hunting with a resortera. He taught me how to tie the bands, how to cut pouches and how to attach bands to the mighty resortera/slingshot. He also taught me how to determine by simply stretching an elastic to know if it would have the required snap to make a good slingshot. He also taught me how to select stones and taught me the value of improvised projectiles for the slingshot such as hex nuts, ball bearings and marbles to name a few. He also gave a quick walk through on tanteo shooting.
2. My uncle my father's brother who helped round out my knowledge of making resorteras and shooting them for hunting. He also is the reason I learned to make chained office rubber band slingshot bands.
Also my maternal grandfather and grand uncle who shared with me their tradition of resorteras from their part of Mexico.
I also thank the guys I met as a kid in the Barrio using slingshots namely the older kid who introduced me to using the #64 rubber bands.
Gracias siempre por la lectura y los consejos que me dierron cuando yo era un morro. For that matter we should take the time and in fact will take the time to say:
Special thanks, to all the fathers, grandfathers, uncles and big brothers and others who helped every kid out there to learn the simple art of the slingshot, the poor mans hunting tool Were it not for these people the rest of us would not have our unique individual slingshot hunting traditions.
There are many men over the years who have helped spark the interest in hunting with Slingshots years before the existence of Internet forums.
Some have been immortalized in old videos like Old Rufus Hussey, then there are others like Mr. Sartain who was amazing with his red inner tube band slingshot and simple rocks and was known to hustle people with his slingshot (making bets with his shooting) and would get his fill of small game at the beginning of a hunting season with his old time slingshot and simple stones for ammo.
Amazing guys like these are what more accurately brought into the public eye the love of the slingshot which has always been a personal tradition varied within families from one land to another.
To say that it is because of the internet and forums that people are so interested in slingshots is not accurate a statement. I think that the more accurate statement would be to say that the slingshot has always been enjoyed by the poor all over the world and really just ignored by the more well to do people in the world.
Truly the homemade rubber powered slingshot is the poor man's hunting tool or the gun of the poor man who could not afford a gun for the sake of putting some food on the table for the family.
All the internet did was expose the use of the this humble tool to the masses of internet viewers.
However: There are still with us today some old time slingshot users that have been using slingshots since before the internet was ever active!
Mr.. Parker has been involved with slingshots from his childhood to his time in Vietnam serving our Country. A retired Navy Seal also still a survival instructor for our current Navy Seals.
He has is own unique style of slingshots based on truly Old fashioned slingshot styles that use heavy surgical tubing and heavy projectiles.
Of course his slingshots can never be simplified with a basic description for the man has evolved his old fashioned slingshot into a truly powerful weapon which stands in a class all its own.
Mr.. Parker has been a long time contributor to Backwoodsman Magazine from its early days and had many times presented articles regarding slingshot hunting.
It's contributions like his that helped fire the interest in slingshot hunting long before the era of forums and its current trend.
He has even contributed in the last few years to Field and Stream Magazine and has a few more recent articles on Backwoodsman.
Mr. Parker has the true spirit of challenge this is the essence of his group squirrel hunts,which the man does hunt by himself many times are hunts conducted in very, very challenging situations. At ranges that are tough in terrain that is tough. Few are successful at his style of hunt which gives the squirrels an enormous advantage. It is amazing to see the man shoot such incredibly heavy tubes with such grace and deadly accuracy.
The man can bring down squirrels that are in thick cover well over 100 feet above in the trees. Here's a video of the man in action. This video was not taken by me and full credit goes to the maker of this video (magnoliaweb) It is some great footage of his skill and shooting his slingshot with heavy projectiles.
Like myself and those who taught me the art of the slingshot Madison does not view the slingshot as a bow or treat it as a bow like so many of the modern slingshot enthusiasts do. What I mean is he does not shoot his slingshots like a bow hunter would by drawing to the cheek, instead he draws deep and shoots by instinctive aiming. I don't know where his Bullet Proof site is but he is also found on the E2E on You tube and they have their own website.
If you wish to look him up this would be a good resource to find the man. This is his current update website http://primitivesupplyco.com/
This blog post goes out to you and those sincere slingshot Hunters who love the pursuit and live for the hunt. There are so many other modern authors who predate the forum era that I can add here who have enriched the interest in hunting with a slingshot but I would run out of words to list them here.