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Aiming with the arrow point

Started by buckeyebowhunter, December 01, 2025, 06:00:39 PM

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Cove-Creek, ohiodoeslayer, buckeyebowhunter, Slowcountry, RG in Idaho, kstout, Yooper-traveler, Tip and 28 Guests are viewing this topic.

buckeyebowhunter

I shoot instinctively and have no plans to change. I tried gapping years ago and did not like it especially for bowhunting. However recently I've been experimenting with aiming at long ranges (30+ yards). For target shooting purposes and just for fun. I've never been a great instinctive shot past about 25 yards.

That being said when I aim with the arrow tip I miss significantly left. Probably 6 inches or so at 30 yards. I also noticed that if I just pull up as if going to shoot instinctively and then sight down my arrow with one eye my arrow tip is not in line with the intended impact point but several inches to the right. I've never noticed this until aiming at these longer distances.

Do you guys think this is a center shot ordeal or a form issue? I feel like my alignment is solid and arrows are tuned well. I'm also canting the bow, seems worse when vertical. I shoot right handed and I'm right eye dominant.

It really doesn't bother me because I don't shoot at those distances in hunting situations, but it has me curious as to what the problem might be. One last thing my bow is cut to center and I'm shooting with a bear weather rest so the arrow is pointed left quite a bit when just resting.

McDave

When you aim using the arrow point, either your dominant eye has to be over the arrow, or you have to hold off to the right or the left to compensate for the arrow not being under your eye. This doesn't matter when you're shooting instinctively, because you're not looking at the arrow. Since you're just doing this for fun, you probably don't want to change the anchor you're using for instinctive, so you're left with holding off target. If your anchor is consistent, once you figure out how much to hold off target, it should remain consistent from shot to shot.
TGMM Family of the Bow

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Kirkll

I think it may be as simple as what you are focusing on. If you are used to instinctive shooting at shorter yardage and want to use your point on as a reference for longer distance, which is gap shooting. Set your gap, then focus on your point of impact, not the tip of the arrow. I think if you practice enough at longer distances it will also become instinctive.  .02 cents
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Stumpkiller

I'm on at 65 yards when I do this with field points.  Was handy for NFAA shoots.
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Bear Kodiak & K. Hunter, D. Palmer Hunter, Ben Pearson Hunter, Wing Presentation II & 4 Red Wing Hunters (LH & 3 RH), Browning Explorer, Cobra II & Wasp, Martin/Howatt Dream Catcher, Root Warrior, Shakespeare Necedah.

Tajue17

I dont aim either mainly im left eye dominant and i shoot RH also if actually see the arrow point when im at full draw i get screwed up!  Have you checked what eye dominance you have and if you have that right then yeah its a point of impact problem where you need to compensate with your aim picture to make the hit.
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Orion

Something is amiss.  If the arrow is pointing right of the target and it hits left, it would indicate a too strong spine.  Or, as McDave suggests, you're not getting the arrow aligned properly under your dominant eye.  Or, possibly, your right eye isn't as dominant as you think.  When you look down your arrow, line up the arrow tip on some target with your right eye only/left eye closed.  Then close your right eye and open the left.  That will move the point to the right of the target. So if the point is to the right of the target with both eyes open, it would indicate that your left eye is taking dominance. If the arrow points to the right with only the right eye open, then it's likely an alignment problem, as McDave suggests. 


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