I have always wanted to learn to shoot traditional. The reason I have nto up to this point is simple; I'm awful at it! I taught myself how to shoot the compound. Even bowfishing, I have become pretty good at instinctively shooting the heavier fish arrow with line attached.
But traditional...a completely different story.
So, as this year ends and 2012 approaches, I will chronicle my desire, successes and failures at mastering the art.
In the process, I would like to welcome and thank LH Custom Archery in advance. Lester, owner and bowyer, has worked with me over the past few days on a custom take-down recurve that I will be proudly using in my endeaver. I will post photos of the bow through the process of Lester's handiwork and maybe even throw some video together once it is finished and I begin the task of learning to shoot the masterpiece.
But don't fret, I will still shoot my compound! If nothing else but to provide sanity and confidence to a surely soon-to-be battered ego!
Please visit LH Custom Archery and view some of the projects he has on hand now.
Bill Howard writes a weekly outdoors column for the Wilson Times and Yancey County News and the blog site Bill Howard's Outdoors. He is a Hunter Education and International Bowhunter Education instructor, lifetime member of the North Carolina Bowhunters Association, Bowhunter Certification Referral Service Chairman, member and official measurer of Pope and Young, and a regular contributor to North Carolina Bowhunter Magazine.
Here are a couple of targets you can print for practicing at different yardages.
One is your standard circle target with a slight variation. The goal is to keep the group in the appropriate size circle based on the yardage. For every 10 yards, your group should be with the inch circle corresponding. For example, if you are shooting from 40 yards, you should group in the 4 inch circle.
The second target is slightly different. It has 5 circles. You can start either with the 1 or the 5 circle, and work your way out or in accordingly shooting one arrow at each circle. Each number is equivalent to 10 yard increments based on the same practice theory as above. (1=10 yards, 2=20 yards, etc.)
Bill Howard writes a weekly outdoors column for the Wilson Times and Yancey County News and the blog site Bill Howard's Outdoors. He is a Hunter Education and International Bowhunter Education instructor, lifetime member of the North Carolina Bowhunters Association, Bowhunter Certification Referral Service Chairman, member and official measurer of Pope and Young, and a regular contributor to North Carolina Bowhunter Magazine.
Practicing bowhunting skills involves many different aspects that we never consciously break down. So I will try to break it down to where we understand each aspect through different posts (after all, I have to keep you wanting for more in order to keep you reading my blog, right?).
The first break down will be based on how far do you practice your shots. I look at shooting the bow the same as a basketball shooting a basketball, a field goal kicker kicking the football, or even a golfer practicing long putts. The basketball player for instance does not want to have to take a 35 foot shot, especially when the 3 point line is over 10 feet closer to the basket. However, if he is comfortable shooting that distance, the shot from the line causing no worries.
The same is true when practicing long bow shots. I use a Spot-Hogg Seven Deadly Pins sight. Many do not like to use a sight with that many pins for fear of using the wrong pin when hunting. I use it to calm any nerves I may have when preparing to shoot. By having to stay alert and focused enough to count my pins, it diminishes any 'buck fever' I may have. But that is another topic for a later post...
I have each of the pins set at 10 yard increments. When sighting in, I will start with the 10 yard pin, then the 30, the 50, and finally the 70. I then go back to the 20, 40 and 60 yard pins, setting them close by splitting differences then actually going thru the sight in process. Once I have them set, I will practice with usually 3 to 6 arrows at the closer distances (10, 20), expand to 12 or so arrows at the medium distances (30, 40), then practice hard at 50, 60, and 70.
I read where Chuck Adams set a goal of a 1 inch group for every 10 yards, meaning at 30 yards the group would be in a 3 inch circle and 50 yards would be a 5 inch circle. I try the same philosophy. First, its easy to calculate in your head and second, it corresponds well with the game you will hunt.
Whitetail deer are very high strung, so even if I practice to 70 yards and have a 70 yard pin, it does not mean I will attempt that shot. The whitetail will jump, dodge, and do a cha-cha while waiting for a 70 yard arrow to come its way even from the fastest of bows. However, an elk, caribou, bear, moose, or bison presents a large target that a 60 yard shot can be taken ethically-if you are comfortable at that distance. Remember the other sports analogies in the beginning of this post? I recently watched Sebastian Janikowski (Raiders) practice kicking 70 yard field goals before a game. It would be hard pressed for a coach to put him in a situation to try the same distance field goal with the game on the line.
When traveling and checking my sights, I will shoot the 10 and 30 pins a few times. If everything is in line with those distances, the others will be in line also. Also, if the 10 and 30 are in line, it will cover my hunt, as most shots will present themselves within those distances.
This is how far I practice, but feel free to share how far you practice as well by commenting below. Hopefully the ideas I have presented can help with your own practice routines.
Bill Howard writes a weekly outdoors column for the Wilson Times and Yancey County News and the blog site Bill Howard's Outdoors. He is a Hunter Education and International Bowhunter Education instructor, lifetime member of the North Carolina Bowhunters Association, Bowhunter Certification Referral Service Chairman, member and official measurer of Pope and Young, and a regular contributor to North Carolina Bowhunter Magazine.