![]() it would take a lifetime to learn all he knows, and with our instant gratification philosophy, most will never take that time to learn. i picked up alot, but he's a master in his own profession, most people, including myself, would never relate to his knowledge even if we tried. He was famous for using recurves, I believe. He was also part of Scent Shield's prostaff at one time, but this was many years ago. he was at most of the shows i did years ago, and we often chatted before and after public hours. Myles Keller used to write for North American Whitetail magazine and has shot many Boon and Crockett trophies in his lifetime. everyone today uses a number to reference a buck they killed, back then no one really knew what a 140 was. myles has alot of character, he was walking the walk long before pope and young became an everyday reference to people's antlers. Ok so I have a Myles Keller Legend XRG fast flight I picked up from a garage sale to use for bowfishing well it needs new string how do I go about figuring. you won't see any videos like that on the market today. i have an xi video of him hunting in kentucky i believe, all he saw was does and a spike, didn't shoot anything only his friend did. i think the last endorsement i saw him do was the block, or some target. now, no one shows their real stuff, just the fakes. i think that's when the synthetic horn industry got a big jump. I remember when his trailer full of heads got stolen.not all his heads, but alot of them. If anyone can give me any more info that would be great. The old string rotted off the bow, i also need ATA and BH but may have found those as 42.5 and 8. Compared to todays instant celebrity he is still one of the best along with, Gene and Barry Wensel, Roger Rotthar, Judy Kovar, and a few others out there! I need to find the string length for an XI Myles Keller edition Legend XRG Fast Flight with a draw of 30-32 and a weight of 60-75. I was a little disappointed when he switched from a black widow to a XI Flatliner back in the day, but that's business I guess. To this day, that's been some of the best, most common sense advise I've been given for outwitting a mature buck. He also said that every piece of real estate has a spot on it where you can take advantage of a bucks travel cooridor, even if it is just one slight bend in the trail that gives you the wind advantage and a savy hunter will find that weakness and use it to their advantage. He said that the hunting the wind is crucial for success and that the very best scenerio is when the wind is almost bad for you and almost perfect for the buck. I remember hearing him speak at one of the very first deer classics in Michigan in the mid-80's. He was just a working stiff that consistently knocked down the big ones hunting them his own way. He was kiling monster bucks way before it cool. I agree with the others that Miles is the real deal. ![]()
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