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when things are not right?

Started by Cyclic-Rivers, July 18, 2012, 10:31:00 PM

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Cyclic-Rivers

Yesterday I took a bow out for a shooting session. I was making a bad release on 40% of my shots.  This is not normal for me. I would estimate i have a bad release more like 5% of the time.

what would you do?
Relax,

You'll live longer!

Charlie Janssen

PBS Associate Member
Wisconsin Traditional Archers


>~TGMM~> <~Family~Of~The~Bow~<

Killdeer

I'm no help.
A bad release is normal.

Killdeer   :rolleyes:
Long, long afterward, in an oak I found the arrow, still unbroke;
And the song, from beginning to end, I found again in the heart of a friend.

~Longfellow

TGMM Family Of The Bow

TxAg

I know I shouldn't, but I can't help but fight through it.

Crash

I always try to finish with a good shot, therefore, I would have to shoot through it.
"Instinctive archery is all about possibilities.  Mechanist archery is all about alternatives. "  Dean Torges

Pat B.


Dogboy900

I voted quit immediately but I am probably more likely to continue shooting till I give up in frustration!
I have occasionally just moved right up to my target and concentrated on getting one arrow away cleanly, but probably should just quit till tomorrow!

Sean B

Hang the bow up and fletch some arrows! tomorrows a new day.
Sean
PBS Regular Member
Comptons
NY Bowhunters Association
BW KB X
BW PCH X
BW PSR X
Robertson Tribal Styk

huntmaster70


saumensch

For me it would be a combination of both answers.

When i realize somethings wrong, i quit shooting for say an hour or so. Then i restart and try to figure out what im doing wrong and work through it.
And sometimes our dreams they float like anchors in hopeless waters oh way down here
Sometimes it seems that all that matters most are all the things that you can't keep
(William Elliot Whitmore)

wapitirod

I've worked in various mechanical trades for almost 30yrs and when I was young and things would start going wrong I'd fight it but it normally ended up the harder I tried to figure out what was wrong the more mistakes I'd make.  As I matured I realized if I'd go grab a cup of coffee or soda and either sit down for a bit or go to another project the answers to the problems would come to me if it were a diagnosis issue and if it were a frustration issue I would return with a calm head and could work through the problem.  I have applied this to everything in life from family issues to shooting firearms and archery equipment.  I've found you normally start overthinking your problem and just make it worse if you don't walk away and clear your head.
89' Brackenbury Drifter 72# @28
Wes Wallace Stealth 66# @28
Wes Wallace Stealth 72# @27


I won't be wronged. I won't be insulted. I won't be laid a-hand on. I don't do these things to other people, and I require the same from them.- John Wayne

2treks

I just Relax and figure I will live longer.

Couldn't help it Charlie.


But I am more in Killie's camp on this one. A bad release seems to be my norm
C.A.Deshler
United States Navy.
1986-1990


"Our greatest fear should not be of failure but of succeeding at things in life that don't really matter."
~ Francis Chan

kadbow

Shoot a different bow.  Switching to a bow I haven't shot in awhile always seems to get me refocused.
Colorado Traditional Archers Society
Colorado Bowhunters Association
Grand Mesa Bowmen
Compton Traditional Bowhunters




TGMM Family of the Bow

Roger Norris

Stop shooting. Work on something else. Fletch some arrows, sharpen a knife....whatever.

Come back to it when your mind is not on your release.

I'm betting you rarely have a bad release when hunting....too much going on in your head. get to THAT place.
https://www.tradwoodsman.com/

"Good Lord....well, your new name is Sledge."
Ron LaClair upon seeing the destruction of his new lock on the east gate

"A man that cheats in the woods will cheat anywhere"
G. Fred Asbell

mcgroundstalker

I couldn't end a shooting session with a "bad shot"... Maybe it's just me but I'd need to work it out right then and there...

Sometimes we are just tired from a days work or upset with life that day and need to hide within ourselves and shoot some arrows... Then, because we are not in a relaxed state of mind, we mess up... There are those who say "put the bow down for now" and I can understand why... Not me though... I'll slow it all down and feel better after a few good shots...

It's All Good Charlie! Hope to see ya soon.

... mike ...
"Be faithful in small things because it is in them that your strength lies"

Archie

I have learned to stop, and immediately CHECK MY BRACE HEIGHT.  My release is not perfect, but it is consistent.  I've learned to have some confidence in that.  Every time that I get weird arrow flight lately (and probably for the recent past), it has been due to my brace height creeping down on me.  A week ago I was picking targets the size of ping-pong balls and hitting them reliably.  Then 2 days later... arrows banging off the bow and flying like a plane with no rudder.  I immediately measured brace height, and it was low.  3 days ago I went outside in the dark, set up an 8" ball to shoot at, took 3 shots at 30 yards and hit it each time, then went to bed.  Last night, terrible accuracy... until I checked my brace and it was low again.  (New string settling in.)
Life is a whole lot easier when you just plow around the stump.

2006  64" Black Widow PMA
2009  66" Black Widow PLX
2023  56" Cascade Archery Whitetail Hawk
2023  52" Cascade Archery Golden Hawk Magnum

kat

Throw the bow on the ground and stomp on it.    :biglaugh:
All kidding aside; I know how you shoot, and a bad release is not common for you.
I like to go back to basics and try to figure it out. Usually that works and sometimes it doesn't.
If I am starting a 40 target 3D round, I am not going to quit for the day. See you Saturday.
Ken Thornhill

Frenchymanny

Listen to Ken, he knows  :)

Tomorrow is another day

F-Manny
Coureur des Bois
Big Jim: Buffalo Bows 62" 60@27 & 65@27 ThunderChilds 56" 62@27 & 62@27 Desert BigHorn 59@27
ML, Shrew &TC Knives
With a sturdy bow, a true shaft, and a stout heart, we journey forth in
search of adventure.

Dr. Saxton Pope

Blackhawk

I get an awful release about one in 50 shots, and find if I concentrate on getting a deep hook, I remedy the situation.  

Quitting and coming back later is not an option since your brain "may" remember your last shot which just perpetuates the malady. Work through it and quit only after you are happy with your release(s).
Lon Scott

Jeff Roark

I would stop and work on Jay Kidwells drills. The floating anchor and the move through the target drills. Personally, I get way better results by doing these drill than the blank bale stuff.

Schafer

QuoteOriginally posted by TxAg:
I know I shouldn't, but I can't help but fight through it.
This sums it up good for me.   :knothead:  

Schafer
"There's more fun in hunting with the handicap of the bow than there is in hunting with the sureness of the gun." - Fred Bear

53@29 Randy Morin Banshee
66@29 Schafer Silvertip


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