Kevin Dill
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2014
- Messages
- 3,158
Shooting a stickbow obviously means no mechanical advantage. If I'm going to get to full draw, the only thing getting me there are the muscles required to do it. That equates to strength. Without sufficient strength I will either be unable to make full draw or will be straining (maybe with muscle tremors or shaking) as I reach my anchor. Being 'bow strong' is a requirement for me to comfortably and calmly handle my hunting bow all the way to anchor. It took me years to accept that...though I hunted with a 65# bow...I wasn't really strong enough to manage it correctly. This led to a host of shooting problems. Oh I killed animals with great regularity, but I wasn't getting my 62" recurve to full draw, which for me is 28-3/4". If I tried to make absolute full draw I could manage it but my muscles were twitching and my brain had my release hand hotwired to dump the string instantly.
Came the day....I grew tired of this and decided to get strong and take full control of the bow. I shot at 5 yards incessantly and did nothing but discipline myself to hit anchor and hold. For me that's a holding weight of about 64 pounds with the longbow I shoot. I kept doing it and kept slowing down my draw. Try drawing your hunting bow at 1/3 speed and see what I mean. It took time but 'bow strong' happened. Today I can pull my 60#+ bows to full draw very slowly without a tremor, twitch or shake. I can hit my anchor and then consider how long to hold. My release is clean, and that leads me to the next thing....
Having the strength to confidently manage the bow at full-max draw has allowed me to focus on improving all the other pieces of a shot sequence. Release, follow-through, steady arm, etc. Without even trying for better accuracy, it happened. I found myself having to back up to keep from shattering arrows. Please don't read any of this as a boast because it's not. My point is only to relate what happens when you are absolutely strong enough to be in total command of the bow. There is no downside to strength when you shoot traditional equipment.
And with that, I'm interested to hear your thoughts, opinions and experiences in this realm.
Came the day....I grew tired of this and decided to get strong and take full control of the bow. I shot at 5 yards incessantly and did nothing but discipline myself to hit anchor and hold. For me that's a holding weight of about 64 pounds with the longbow I shoot. I kept doing it and kept slowing down my draw. Try drawing your hunting bow at 1/3 speed and see what I mean. It took time but 'bow strong' happened. Today I can pull my 60#+ bows to full draw very slowly without a tremor, twitch or shake. I can hit my anchor and then consider how long to hold. My release is clean, and that leads me to the next thing....
Having the strength to confidently manage the bow at full-max draw has allowed me to focus on improving all the other pieces of a shot sequence. Release, follow-through, steady arm, etc. Without even trying for better accuracy, it happened. I found myself having to back up to keep from shattering arrows. Please don't read any of this as a boast because it's not. My point is only to relate what happens when you are absolutely strong enough to be in total command of the bow. There is no downside to strength when you shoot traditional equipment.
And with that, I'm interested to hear your thoughts, opinions and experiences in this realm.