First time target practice shooting
#21
Thanks for your supportive post and good advice SH-54. To the original poster all the information about getting some help first hand is good advice and your shooting experience will be much better more quickly with some help. It sounds like your husband has adequate knowledge to help you since he was able to do some technical work on your new bow. The more you shoot with the right form the stronger you will get and if your bow is set up right the accuracy should come. A hand release will certainly help out with any bow and as SH said some shorter bows actually need that to eliminate finger pinch. Target archery is a lot of fun and safety first should be followed. Good luck.
#23
Spike
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2015
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 21
Thanks guys! I didn't do anything I didn't feel comfortable with, my husband and buddy know what they're doing till I get a shop to take a look for me too. I've learned enough through the last year to be able to have shot yesterday.i don't plan on shooting anymore until I get to a shop to get arrows for myself. Thanks for understanding I'm just wanting to learn and was looking for tips to the ones who were nice and knowledgable. I understand the two rude guys completely but you need to come across a different way, people just want to learn and that takes practice, you shouldn't be so rude its discouraging to new hunters.
#25
Oldtimr and Topgun3006 are both on 2-month timeouts as a result of the rules violations in this topic. If anybody else feels like piling onto a new member and joining them in their timeouts, please feel free to post right below this post.
For the OP, most of the members in the forum try to be helpful and are not condescending, insulting and rude. Stick around and feel free to invite your hubby and his friend as well.
I'm not an archery guy so can't offer you advice. IMHO, the single most knowledgeable archery guy on this website is LBR. He doesn't post a lot anymore but his advice would be spot on and quite useful. He has competed in archery, teaches it, works for a major bow string manufacturer and is one of those encyclopedia type guys that has likely forgotten more than most guys will ever learn. High praise but he really is that knowledgeable.
CalHunter
Moderator
Edit--SuperHunt54 is also extremely knowledgeable about archery. My apologies for leaving him out of the above compliment.
For the OP, most of the members in the forum try to be helpful and are not condescending, insulting and rude. Stick around and feel free to invite your hubby and his friend as well.
I'm not an archery guy so can't offer you advice. IMHO, the single most knowledgeable archery guy on this website is LBR. He doesn't post a lot anymore but his advice would be spot on and quite useful. He has competed in archery, teaches it, works for a major bow string manufacturer and is one of those encyclopedia type guys that has likely forgotten more than most guys will ever learn. High praise but he really is that knowledgeable.
CalHunter
Moderator
Edit--SuperHunt54 is also extremely knowledgeable about archery. My apologies for leaving him out of the above compliment.
Last edited by CalHunter; 08-26-2016 at 05:54 PM.
#26
Spike
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2015
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 21
Oldtimr and Topgun3006 are both on 2-month timeouts as a result of the rules violations in this topic. If anybody else feels like piling onto a new member and joining them in their timeouts, please feel free to post right below this post.
For the OP, most of the members in the forum try to be helpful and are not condescending, insulting and rude. Stick around and feel free to invite your hubby and his friend as well.
I'm not an archery guy so can't offer you advice. IMHO, the single most knowledgeable archery guy on this website is LBR. He doesn't post a lot anymore but his advice would be spot on and quite useful. He has competed in archery, teaches it, works for a major bow string manufacturer and is one of those encyclopedia type guys that has likely forgotten more than most guys will ever learn. High praise but he really is that knowledgeable.
CalHunter
Moderator
Edit--SuperHunt54 is also extremely knowledgeable about archery. My apologies for leaving him out of the above compliment.
For the OP, most of the members in the forum try to be helpful and are not condescending, insulting and rude. Stick around and feel free to invite your hubby and his friend as well.
I'm not an archery guy so can't offer you advice. IMHO, the single most knowledgeable archery guy on this website is LBR. He doesn't post a lot anymore but his advice would be spot on and quite useful. He has competed in archery, teaches it, works for a major bow string manufacturer and is one of those encyclopedia type guys that has likely forgotten more than most guys will ever learn. High praise but he really is that knowledgeable.
CalHunter
Moderator
Edit--SuperHunt54 is also extremely knowledgeable about archery. My apologies for leaving him out of the above compliment.
#27
Thank you! I will keep him in mind next time I want to know some things. I dont plan on leaving this site I like it other then these two who were posting rudly. I understand what they were saying though. Just did sort of discouraged me. Next time I post I'll be sure not to leave the tiniest of details out in my post next time.
#29
Welcome to archery and to HNI. I'm not the expert here, but CI and SH gave good advice.
I would suggest a couple of things based on my experience learning. First of all, if you are going to use a release, you should start practicing with a release.
Second, you should have one of those guys watch you at the beginning until you have developed the proper form. It's easier to learn the proper form from the beginning than to correct bad form later.
I would suggest a couple of things based on my experience learning. First of all, if you are going to use a release, you should start practicing with a release.
Second, you should have one of those guys watch you at the beginning until you have developed the proper form. It's easier to learn the proper form from the beginning than to correct bad form later.