"accuracy for most humane shots"? It is a good topic and one which requires brutal honesty with yourself. I hunted a lot with some friends this past season, both of them recent converts to self bow hunting. They are both accomplished deer hunters with rifle and compound bow, but getting them to adjust their stand placements for this kind of hunting has been a process. There were enough missed opportunities for them this season to have convinced them that maybe the old guy is right! I have made a few long shots in forty plus years of this stuff, but most of the deer I have taken with a bow have been under 12 yards. Hunting in the eastern hardwoods for whitetails usually means tree stands or ground blinds to me. My favorite shot is ten yards and closer from a tree stand no higher than ten feet up. If you go too high up, you can't double lung a deer as easily. If you want to know why, try and pop two balloons nailed to the ground side by side. The difference in one lung popped and two lungs punctured can be a difference in blood tracking distance measured in hundreds of yards. I have taken many deer from 5 to 7 yards away, but believe me, you can miss at that distance if you don't pick a spot low in the kill zone and hit your mark. Twistedlimbs (Ryan Gil) posted a great practice drill a while back involving a five inch circle and a cold shot. I think he was on to something with his thinking. Learning to hunt into the wind and get your ambush spot set up for a close shot is as important as your shooting. If you can get those things working for you, if you can hit in a place as big as your hand, and if the cutting edge of your arrow point is scary sharp, you can kill deer with a wood bow. Good luck next season.