I made a post recently replying to comment that mentioned rabbit sticks
Please note that I am not advocating or condoning the use of these sticks as a hunting aid, not least because better options exist, I am simply showing what I know as a "rabbit stick".
I think "stick" evokes something twiggy. This is in fact a rabbit stick
It's made of blackthorn although hornbeam works well too. You want a dense, heavy wood, because it needs to be heavy
It has to be heavy because it needs to carry momentum when thrown .
Each is sized to fit the owner. I make them oval to fit my hand
For length it wants to be as long as your arm
It's honestly a utility tool. You could hunt with it by throwing it spinning parallel to the ground, but it could also serve many other purposes - from a carrier for barbed wire spools, to a way to use the broomstick method on chickens.
In many ways it's perhaps a more utilitarian shillelagh, carried tucked under the arm of the countryman (or boy) who had nothing fancier.
There's quite an art in launching one hard and accurately.
Hope that was interesting, happy to answer questions
Red
Some people asked to see what I would term a rabbit stick, so here goes.I was raised on rabbit sticks - I still always have one around for fun and nostalgia. A rabbit stick to me is the perfect dimensions when its the diameter of the hole made by touching the index finger to thumb in an "ok" sign.
For length, if the arm is held loosely at the side, fingers curled, it should tuck into the armpit, held by the fingers.
As a 6' guy, my current stick is 2 foot long and oval in cross section an inch and a half across the long side.
I make them from blackthorn - its hard and really heavy.
Throwing wise they are normally thrown spinning, parallel to the floor - out to 20 yards they hit really, really hard. They can be thrown end on through foliage, but don't get the same force so its a shorter range.
Happy to show pictures if anyone is interested
Please note that I am not advocating or condoning the use of these sticks as a hunting aid, not least because better options exist, I am simply showing what I know as a "rabbit stick".
I think "stick" evokes something twiggy. This is in fact a rabbit stick
It's made of blackthorn although hornbeam works well too. You want a dense, heavy wood, because it needs to be heavy
It has to be heavy because it needs to carry momentum when thrown .
Each is sized to fit the owner. I make them oval to fit my hand
For length it wants to be as long as your arm
It's honestly a utility tool. You could hunt with it by throwing it spinning parallel to the ground, but it could also serve many other purposes - from a carrier for barbed wire spools, to a way to use the broomstick method on chickens.
In many ways it's perhaps a more utilitarian shillelagh, carried tucked under the arm of the countryman (or boy) who had nothing fancier.
There's quite an art in launching one hard and accurately.
Hope that was interesting, happy to answer questions
Red