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shooting in the dark

Started by canshooter, December 22, 2008, 10:51:00 PM

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canshooter

Bear with a new guy here if this has been discussed before. Ive gone outside to shoot a couple of evenings this week. I have about 11 yards up the side of my house but it is unlit and fairly dark. I dont get home from work in the winter until around 6:30 or 7, and by then it has been dark for 2 hours or more. My target bag is just a silhouette so I just aim for an imaginary point in the center and practice form and release. The cool thing is I am getting groups of 6, no worse than the size of an apple and many times about 2 inch in diameter. Even though I cannot see the arrows until I approach the target I can usually tell whether it will be good or not before looking.

BOFF

Well,

At least your form is consistent, but to me, and just my opinion, you need an actual point to visually see, to be aiming at and shooting.

In other words, it doesn't matter if I have a 2 inch group of 4 arrows, just above the squirrels head, when I'm hungry, and only have 4 arrows..    :bigsmyl:

ses

luke feel the force let the force be with you
if a man is alone in the woods and no woman can hear him is still wrong?

Greg Owen

Try getting a laser pointer and cut up a hanger to make a holder and tape the laser pointer on. Put the dot in the center of the bag and aim at that. Just concentrate on the dot. You will be surprised how much it helps when you concentrate.
Greg  >>>>>--------------->
A Traditional Archer and Vegetarian.

PastorSteveHill

Good advice from G. Owen.

One thing I've had to overcome is "shooting from memory"  ....  Let me explain.

It usually doesn't happen unless I'm 25 or 30 yards or farther...  What was heppening was, I'd find a spot to shoot. Look at it , draw, anchor, settle, and shoot for the spot I saw, or "Remembered" and let the arrow go... Many times it would fly aloft, missing the mark.. I figured out when I stare at the spot and draw at the spot and anchor at the spot and settle at the spot and stare at the spot some more and the release happens at the spot... Mysteriously, the arrow hits the spot...  Imagery is good, before the shot, but when it comes time to shoot something, look at it a let it happen.. You can not hit what you can't see...  

Steve
Blessings,
Steve

canshooter

The laser pointer seems like a brilliant idea, although my original intention was just to practice form and release, grouping was really just a happy accident.

J-KID

I recently did a similar thing as an experiment.  I set up a target that was illuminated enough to see the "spot", however, where I was standing was too dark to see my bow, arrow or any other reference that I might be using subconsciously to aim.  I'm left eye dominant and I shoot right handed.  If I consciously look at the bow or arrow it really messes me up because I see nothing that remotely appears to help in the aiming process.  I was set up at 20 yards.  The hypothesis being tested was to prove that I indeed use some point of reference at my end to align to the target and not just proprioceptive stimuli (the feel of my body - arms and hands holding the bow - in space).

What do you think the results demonstrated?  Anyone want to guess before I tell you?
Jay Kidwell
BW PLV TD
64" / 50 & 55#

PastorSteveHill

I bet you are right, you do indeed use some sort of reference.. I've tried the same thing.
Blessings,
Steve

Greg Owen

My bet would be you shot better groups
Greg  >>>>>--------------->
A Traditional Archer and Vegetarian.

J-KID

Wow!  The first two guesses are different.  I'll tell you tomorrow.  Let's see what some others have to say.
Jay Kidwell
BW PLV TD
64" / 50 & 55#

longbowben

Just turn the flood lights on the target, your family can find thier way in the dark.My wife just got use to it.  :biglaugh:
54" Hoots 57@28
60" MOAB 60@28
Gold tip, 160gr Snuffer
TGMM Family of the Bow
USAF 90-96 69TH Bomb Squadron

huntsfairchase

My guess is you shot 2 seperate groups. Due to the fact that subconsciously you used a reference point in one, and the other not, just instinctive.
"Each one must find within his heart,
a quiet place where he may go.
To find himself and for a space,
drink deeply where still waters flow."

bowhunterfrompast

canshooter, I read and reread your post. Sounds like to me everything is working just the way it is, imaginery point and all.
Rick Wakeman
UBM Lifetime Member
American Broadhead Collectors Club

BONE

I agree with Greg. If i understood what I read  in your book,your spot on the target is all you need.Every thing else should be automatic from all your practice.----------Bone

J-KID

I got interested in "shooting in the dark" after a discussion with Darryl Quidort who co-produced Masters of the Barebow I & II.  He talked about shooting in the dark in his basement on the video.  He later told me that his groups spread out as it got darker even though the target was illuminated.

Here's what happened with my experiment.  I shot three arrows and the group was about 8" larger than normal.  So I shot another three and it tightened up a bit.  I shot a few more groups and never could get a tight group as I do when it is light.

My first thought was that since I didn't have a reference point that I could see on my end, my accuracy had decreased.  However, I noticed that my groups tended to spread out vertically rather than horizontally.  This tells me that the loss of accuracy may be more of a depth perception problem that results from shooting in the dark, rather than a subconscious reference issue with the bow/arrow.  I'm a big believer in visualizing the arrows flight.  I couldn't do that since it was  dark between me and the target.  Other than retinal disparity, which may have been severely compromised in the darkness of the trials, we use object overlap and relative size to perceive depth.  I had none of those cues available to me so my perception of depth would have been impaired to some degree.

So what's the conclusion?  I don't think I know yet.  I'll have to think through it some more and see if I can't come up with a different way to test this isolating and manipulating each variable.

One thing with the red laser.  Your rods cannot perceive red light so you have completely taken them out of the equation as you fix on that red spot.  You are solely relying on your cones to focus on the spot which does not replicate normal shooting situations.  It might still be sufficient to get a hit, but it is a variable worth considering.

I guess this is To Be Continued . . .

Canshooter, I'd think this would indeed be a great way to work on your form. YOu should really be able to really tune in to it since you cannot focus on the target.
Jay Kidwell
BW PLV TD
64" / 50 & 55#

champ38

Ive used a laser pointer on serveral occassions and my groups where better than daylight shooting..Has to be some kinda muscle memory or something without the visual cues of sight pics.
56" Shrew Classic Carbon 68@29
58" 2-P Centaur Cabon Elite 57@29

J-KID

I think this is more complicated than it first appears.  I'm going to get a laser and try it out.
Jay Kidwell
BW PLV TD
64" / 50 & 55#

heydeerman

I do this often. IMO it is similar to hunting situations. I rarely have the opportunity to pick a specific spot on an animal. When I am shooting in the dark and I hit the kill I am plenty satisfied. Sometimes I will prop a flashlight on a stone or something and will shoot for the light. I think it's good practice.

Lone archer

I've shot in the dark with a lit candle in front of my back stop as a point of aim and my groups tightened up.

But that laser pointer has me thinking, being that my shots are under twenty yards maybe it would show up on the side of a deer! Na just thinking!

Darryl Quidort

Jay,
I'm waiting (with bated breath.LOL) for some more input on this.

Try using a flashlight with the lens covered with black electrical tape.  Poke a small hole in the tape so a small spot of light shines on a blank bale.

Good luck,

Darryl

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