Gila
Well-known member
Turn the draw weight down about 5 lbs. When you comfortably draw you should be able to keep the bow level. If you have to point up in the air to draw then your draw weight is too high. You can eventually, slowly increase your draw weight as you practice. Figure out your anchor point. Everyone is slightly different. Some people use a kisser button to start. You should hit the wall comfortably at the anchor point. You will probably need subtle changes to your draw length to do that. Then do a paper tear and make rest adjustments if necessary. You can pick up a square for not much. There are other things that can cause a bad tear but that should get you started. I would ditch the 3d target for now and get a large bag. You will need to shoot at least 30 arrows a day better is 60. 30 in the morning and 30 in the afternoon. Once your muscles get tuned up you can work on exact form and holding. It will take weeks at least to get to that point.Hey guys,
I just picked up my first compound this weekend and got a couple hours at the range for instructions. I did smoke my forearm (rocking a beautiful bruise this week) which may have me a little gun shy.
I shot well at the range and was hitting vitals on a 3D deer consistently. The next day my shooting really fell apart though. I would shoot a solid group at 20 and then fling a wild one after 6-10 shots.
How do you guys recommend I approach my practice to become proficient by deer season in October? Should I limit myself as not to get fatigued and sloppy or should I shoot til I’m burnt out? My common sense tells me to shoot in brief sessions consistently until my bow muscles strengthen but maybe I’m wrong.
Any advice is appreciated!