These are straight-shooting, no-nonsense compounds priced for working-class bowhunters who don’t like to compromise with their equipment. The Poison 30 (and companion Poison 32) carries on Parker’s tradition of providing flagship compound bows at prices well below the industry average. So some 17 years after hunting with that early model, I’m shooting a Parker once more, and it’s the completely redesigned 2018 Poison 30. After all, Parker certainly makes fine bows, and they’re models typically include the types of easy-shooting characteristics I gravitate towards. Today Parker is an industry fixture, so a lot of time has passed since I shot my last Parker bow. Parker was a relative newcomer back then, but also the industry’s fastest-growing bow company of the day. I could also tell you that it was impressively quiet and shot very well, but I couldn’t tell you what model it was to save my life. I remember that Parker bow being impressively lightweight while tearing up and down New Mexico’s rough-and-tumble Gila Wilderness mountains in search of pure-breed Merriam’s. I was in the midst of my turkey-hunting mania-around the time I shot an archery turkey slam in a single spring-so that would date it to around 2000. I easily recall the last time I shot a Parker bow, although pinning a date on it would prove more difficult.
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