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Practice.

Started by shankspony, October 31, 2019, 01:40:32 PM

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shankspony

With longer evenings now, Im finding time to get back into a bit of practice.

Thought it might be interesting to show one of my routines Im using.

For trad archery, In my opinion there is only the first shot. I also find that for me, repetitive shooting just produces muscle fatigue and introduces poor shots and frustration.
This way I get a little break between shots and relax my muscles.
I also like to get my head into processing different distances rather than getting comfortable at one.
I also prefer a blank target with no bullseye. It makes me pick a spot on a neutral canvas, much as like on an animal covered in hair.
I start at 25 meters and fire one shot, walk 5 meters closer and fire another etc.
The final shot may look easy, but its the one I often have most trouble with. The close proximity often induces a flinch in me and I tend not to be able to concentrate and have a mindset that I cant miss/ Introduce poor form.

Also if anyone out there picks up any form issues they see, would appreciate comment.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LMQU3z0u17I

ozy clint

looking good shanks. i don't like to shoot lots of arrows either, instead trying to execute a few shots perfectly.  :archer2:
Thick fog slowly lifts
Jagged peaks and hairy beast
Food for soul and body.

Border black douglas recurve 70# and 58# HEX6 BB2 limbs

Silent footed

Hey I practice the same way to drill in my yardage estimation. I rarely ever shoot the same distance twice. I'll do something like this: 35, 5, 20, 40, 15, 25, 10 etc. And every distance in between.  I try to mix it up as much as possible. Awesome practice. You know you're doing it right when all arrows fall in a killing group.

I do the walk downs and walk ups like in your video too. It really helps me learn my bow/arrow trajectory in a hurry. The rest of my practice is woods walks and stump shooting (usually when coming out of the field in the morning, or when scouting in spring and summer). I like this because I can shoot uphill/downhill, and practice around obstacles and work on threading arrows between branches midrange.

shankspony

Yep for me too, stump shooting is extremely valuable! Nothing like loosing an arrow in the sam type of country you will be hunting for sharpening you up.

Silent footed

Yeah, especially if the type of country you're loosing arrows in is new Zealand! Must be quite an interesting place.

shankspony

Its is, but you know the grass is always greener elsewhere. I keep thinking I should find a way to spend 3-5 years in the States hunting what to us here, are the wonderfully exotic species you guys have.

SlowBowKing

Totally agree with the first shot theory.

Keep shooting groups like that and you'll be just fine!
-King

Compton Traditional Bowhunters
PBS Associate Member

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