Official California bowhunting safety course Link to California Game & Fish Commission

Chapter 4: Know Your Bow and Arrow
Arrow Points

The point of an arrow defines its function. An arrow can be fitted with a variety of points designed for specific tasks, from target practice to big game hunting. The same dozen arrows, when properly matched to your bow, can be tipped with practice points before hunting season and later tipped with big game hunting broadheads that shoot equally well.

Arrow points are available in numerous styles, shapes, and weights; and each is designed for a specific purpose.

Types of Arrow Points

Types of Arrow Points: Bullet point, blunt point, field point, JUDO point, fish point

 

While it is important to have the right equipment, technology does not replace good hunting skills.

Target, Bullet, and Field Points

  • Designed to be shot into paper, foam targets, or grass-type targets.
  • Can be matched to the weight of big game broadheads that a hunter plans to use during hunting season. Practicing with weight-matched target points minimizes bow sight adjustments before hunting season.

Judo® Points

  • Designed for field practice, and used while roving under simulated hunting conditions, selecting targets such as leaves, stumps, or sticks.
  • Have small, protruding wire springs on the arrow point to prevent the arrow from disappearing when shot into ground cover.
  • Weigh the same as most popular big game broadheads.

Blunt Points

  • Work best for small game animals, such as rabbits and squirrels.
  • Are square-tipped, not pointed and made from rubber, plastic, or steel.
  • Kill by shock.
  • Made from rubber and plastic, blunts flair out at the tip to form a much wider blunt, which delivers more shock to the target.
  • Used with flu-flu fletched shafts for squirrel hunting.

Bowfishing Points

  • Made of steel and designed to penetrate the hard scales of carp, gar, and other rough fish.
  • Equipped with a strong barb to allow retrieval of the fish.
  • Usually feature screw-off or retractable barbs for easy fish removal.

California Department of Fish and Game

Course Overview
Course Chapters
Get Certified
Wildlife Glossary
Bowhunting Resources
< Back to Previous Page Table of Contents Go to Next Page >
 
Official bowhunting safety course for California bowhunters last modified: March 17, 2008
Email with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 1998-2008 Today's Bowhunter and Kalkomey Enterprises, Inc. All rights reserved.
Review the Today's Bowhunter privacy policy.