I starting shooting trad last year. Once I discovered this awesome adventure, I felt like I had come home.
This past March I bought a bow from one of the members here off the classifieds. No complaints here at all. The bow was built by a reputable bowyer and the seller was a joy to deal with. The bow looked practically brand new even though it was a few years old.
Fast forward to today. I have enjoying shooting this bow immensely. I shoot daily and I feel I have learned so much about real archery(I shot with training wheels over 25 years). My accuracy really went up when I finally got the right spine arrows, thanks to advice from one of our fellow members.
This morning the unthinkable happened. My bow broke. It's 18 days until opening day here and I have the last week of Sept. scheduled off to hunt. I was so looking forward to hunting trad only this season, but now it looks like I'm back to wheels.
My question is, should I contact the bowyer? I'm not looking for anything. Do you think he would want to know? While I don't know about the previous owners, I always use a bow stringer, I always unstring after shooting and I kept it stored properly. I was always mindful to shoot around 8-10 gpp. What do you guys think?
sell the wheels and get another trad. bow, you have time. i probably would contact the bowyer to update . if a three piece and limb broke....maybe a loaner set of limbs??
The maker might give you some insight as to what went wrong. What is you draw length and bow specs?
Been there myself. its always good to have a back up bow just for this reason. Very Very seldom does a bow come apart but it does occationally happen. I dont think going back to the wheels is the best solution especialy when you practiced so hard. If you cant buy or borrow another bow to get you thru the season let me know. I have a few extras laying around here and would rather lend you one so you can enjoy this sport until you get a new one of your own. No reason to ever go back to a compound.
Man I'm sorry to hear that, that's just terrible. Sell the wheels and get another, my last wheelie bow will be put on the auctions site this week.
Man I'm sorry to hear that, that's just terrible. Sell the wheels and get another, my last wheelie bow will be put on the auctions site this week.
Outstanding !!!
Way to step up LB.. If LB doesn't have a bow that suits you maybe I do.. Let us know !
Now solo ???
Bummer!!!! I would contact to builder and just let them know. I would then sell the wheels, scour the classifieds on here or order a Samick Journey from Lancaster. Order it about the same draw weight as your broken one and your arrows should be close. Sweet shooting bow for the money! I would not be afraid to hunt with one at all. Good luck!
I actually do have a backup. I got it off that auction site. I hate the way it shoots but I'll just have to suck it up I guess. I'm just extremely frustrated as I have really put in the time and things were just starting to really click. This was a good quality bow and I really liked it. My concern is do I have enough time to become acquainted with something this late? I'm a little slow-witted....I don't think I can make myself go back to wheels though.
I have always been told that your brain's eye will adjust rather quickly to a new bow so I would think you do. I know I went from shooting a 58lb long bow to shooting the 50lb recurve in my sig and after about two days I was shooting it like a champ. That is if your arrows are spined correctly for the other bow.
Thanks for the replies. You guys are truly awesome! Thanks for the offers as well and thanks for letting me vent. I've been through worse. This is just a bump in the road. I knew I could vent here. Who else could understand any better than you guys???
LB and Pat, you guys are awesome!
A couple of years ago, I had a bow come apart as I was drawing on a turkey; that was a bummer. But, I picked up another bow and was shooting OK with it in a couple of days.
Go with your other bow and then be on the lookout for one to replace your broken one. Bows break, but there are lots of bargains in our very own classifieds, not to mention lots of great sponsors on TG.
Sorry to hear about your bow. It's frustrating when you put the time and work in only to face another setback. :mad: You still have time before the season starts. A few practice sessions and I bet you'll be good to go.
Good luck with your season.
Jon :archer:
Looks like your on the road to recovery, this is one reason you want your back up gear to be near or same specs as your go to gear, that way the learning curve is very small.
good luck with your season
You'll adjust fairly quickly to another bow. Just make sure you have arrows and broadheads that fly well out of it. The brain is very adaptive. You may have to limit your shots when hunting to a closer range.
It stinks, but bows just break every once in a while. I have had several break over the years and it is always a heart breaking, gut wrenching event!
Good luck getting situated with a new bow and good luck on the hunting season!
Bisch
Yep and it happens at the least opportune time. I had a bamboo backed osage bow I'd built for an elk hunt and had it come apart a few days before we left. Ended up shooting the bow from the year before and taking a nice cow.
Mike
Get a new bow asap. I'd contact the bowyer to give heads up. It depends on who they are though...some are gracious and helpful to used owners and some will give cold shoulder, you'll just have to see. Glad you didn't get hurt.
"Everything put together by man, sooner or later falls apart." I read that somewhere.
Regardless, sorry for your loss. I agree with others. Pick up your other bow, or buy a different one, and shoot it. Switching bows shouldn't affect accuracy. May take a day or two to adjust, but this isn't rocket science.
You didn't indicate where or how your bow broke, but here are a couple of things to watch out for. Heat. If the bow was left strung, or even unstrung, in the sun, a hot vehicle, etc., the glue bond can be weakened and the bow will delaminate, sometimes while at rest, others when it's drawn. A long draw length on a short bow is asking for trouble. Modern materials and designs have come a long way, but long draws on short bows put substantially more stress on the limbs.
Good luck.
Thanks for all the positive comments everyone! It looks like it's time to get to work. One thing I've learned in this life is big set backs usually lead to big rewards. I sure am gonna miss that bow though....might just hang it on the wall as a decoration since it hasn't broken completely apart yet.
I would like to say how sorry I am about the loss...it stinks. I would also like to say thanks for "manning up" to the fact that stuff happens. Find a new bow and life goes on... I have noticed way way too many guys recently that look to want a quick fix and refund over stuff like this...it's nobody's fault. You will quickly adjust to a new bow and be happy with it in time. Thank you.
Check to see if the bowyer has any in stock bows. explain your situation, you might be back up with familiar equipment sooner than you think.
Bummer about the bow, best of luck.
I agree with Charlie, I have had several bowyers help with bows that I was not the original owner and they still helped me out. I actually had two bowyers replace bows for me and one was 5 years old and I was the 3rd. owner. Shawn
Sell the wheels, you will never regret it or say "man I wish I had that back".
Hey Marine. If The other fellas don't have bow that suits, let me know. I've probably got one that will fit the bill.
Maj Tom.
After shooting a compound for many years, I somehow got out of it for about 10 years or so. Last year I decided to get back into it, but I wanted to do it differently, so I went traditional. I will never go back. There's just something about it. I even use wood arrows now. Anyway, my first longbow was a PSE Sequoia I believe and 2 days before the season opened it broke in my hand. No big pop or smack in the face, it just folded one day when I drew it back. I just stood there like I had seen an alien. I couldn't believe it. I had bought it from Bas Pro and by that time decided that I wanted to upgrade to something like a HH (mainly cause I love his book..not cause I'm experience enough to actually deem myself worthy), but I didn't have the funds. For anything at that time actually. Lucky for me, the guy at Bas Pro was sympathetic and gave me a gift card for the amount and I bought a Bear Montana. Now I usually like to support personally made products, not big corporations (all my surfboards were made by shapers here in FL), but I love the Bear and still use it today. That's my recommendation. Plus I was able to hunt last season because of the convenience.
Yep, just a little bad luck. No fault of the bowyer or the previous owner. Thanks again for all the offers everyone! I contacted the bowyer and he asked me to mail it to him and after he takes a look at it, I'll see what his recommendation is.
By the way solobowhunter, I was 0231 93-99 in the 2nd MACE at LeJeune. OO-RAH!