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  • August 26, 2009

    Archery Quiz: Win a Free Backpack From Yamaha

    The Lightning Mountain Pack from Yamaha is the really cool swag this week for the first correct answer. No shot angle or target placement this year. We have discussed that way too much. Let’s go bowfishing and see what you know.

    Scenario: Bowfishing for carp from shore in accordance with all fish and game regulations. Very clear water. Little to no structure in the stream or on the bank. Shots are in the 15- to 25-foot range with the fish cruising about two feet deep. Very little pressure put on the fish. Bluebird skies, but the stream has a stronger current than normal. Water is a little choppy due to a constant breeze. Most of the fish are in the ballpark of five pounds, with a few bruisers for a stream this size.

    Question: In reference to making the shot, what is the single most important tidbit of information did you get in the scenario, and why?

    —John Davis

  • May 12, 2009

    1,000 Shots

    Before the crew ever makes it Grapevine for the first Regional, we will have shot the brand-spanking new Diamonds at least a hundred times. I know it sounds great—hanging out with couple of buds just flinging carbon over God’s green acre. And it is…for the first few days. But after that, you become convinced that your friends are in dire need of professional help and that shoulder impingements are punishment for the bad stuff you did in college.

    Even a dirt clod could learn target placement with this amount of time at the range. I have written in previous blogs about how we try and utilize angles, lighting, and terrain changes, so let’s not cover those again. Breaking the target’s outline and staggering are two other techniques you can use in practice.

    Find an open backdrop with a single tree and place your 3-D deer about 10 yards in front of it. Blend the vitals (angle it so the tree blocks any backdrop from the front leg to the kidney) into the tree and shoot from unknown distances. Watch your grouping to see if you pattern high or low.

    Staggered targets can have the same effect. Angle a target to the right at 15 yards, another to the left at 25, and a third facing you at 30. Again, watch your grouping and see if staggering targets (distance and facing angle) cause you to pull.

    While I’m never exactly sure how we will set up an archery course until we are at the venue, the one shot I’m sure you won’t see at a Regional is a dead-on broadside.

    —John Davis

  • April 23, 2009

    The Practice of Small

    I could always count on Mr. Owen.

    After a summer of watching me, his pre-teen neighbor, fling arrows in groups that resembled a pattern of bird shot, he pulled himself away from building lure molds to give some much-needed advice to this fledgling archer.

    “Son,” he said, “practice smaller and you’re gonna miss smaller.”

    The 12-inch paper plate came down and the bottom of a to-go cup took its place. Increased focus, tighter arrow grouping, and confidence on the firing line grew daily. My stock at the range rose all the way to “he ain’t awful” in just a few weeks.

    Try to implement Mr. Owen’s sage advice into your TOC practice regimen to increase its effectiveness. Pitching a jig to a willow leaf or shooting dandelion blooms with your air rifle will force you to pay strict attention to all the influences on accuracy. Wind, yardage, and angle will all become second nature after having to spot judge these factors in practice.

    I once heard Brian Hanford, a fellow TOC staffer, give some great advice to a disappointed competitor that blends perfectly with the practice small, miss small theory.

    “Visualize that whatever you used as a practice target is floating in the middle of the center ring,” he said. “You look at those big outside rings, and you’re setting yourself up to miss in those rings.”

    —John

    dek: 
    After a summer of watching me, his pre-teen neighbor, fling arrows in groups that resembled a pattern of bird shot, he pulled himself away from building lure molds to give some much-needed advice to this fledgling archer.

TOC
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