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Please Correct My Anchor Position
PAHunter:
I am a good compound bow shooter and I consider my compound form to be quite good. I’m now shooting traditional bows for the first time and have a lot of trouble finding form that sound and accurate. A big question of mine is good anchor position and how it relates to overall form and accuracy. Here are notes and pics from my practice today with an elm I made and am breaking in.
Position 1: One finger over 2 under. Middle finger comes back past my mouth.
Pros: Feels fantastic and closest to my compound form. From what I can see this is a common position.
Cons: My aim point at 20 yards is 4-5 feet low and a foot right! That’s crazy! I’m very inaccurate when aiming so far below my target.
Position 2: 3 fingers under. Middle finger comes back past my mouth.
Pros: Feels almost as good as position 1.
Cons: Same as pos 1 but my aim point is a foot or two higher. Still way too low to be very accurate.
Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wx5pJzh_FZ0
Position 3: 3 fingers under. I bring the arrow to right below my eye; and my eye toward the arrow a bit. I kind of think of it as a dart
Pros: This was instantly the most accurate position by far. I was shooting point on at 12 and about a foot low at 20. 10-20 is my hunting distance so this is perfect.
Cons: It feels horrible. I fell as though I’m all scrunched up. It is way off of my compound form.
Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ABmteIRup8
Ugh!! Your advice is greatly welcome and needed! Thanks!
JW_Halverson:
Pick the position you feel most comfortable with and can consistently his without any one brain cell having to talk to another. AND QUIT AIMING!!!
I know it sounds counter-intuitive. Just spend your time perfecting the smooth nocking of an arrow, effortless draw to anchor point, hesitate a half-heartbeat, and exhale as the arrow slips from your fingers. Keep staring at the center of the target with a "head of a pin" focus and let the arrows go where ever they bloody well feel like going. Eventually they will figure out where you want them to fly and where you look they will go.
Getting into the zen of perfect form and effortless release will allow your subconscious to do all the alignment to getting in the kill zone. My natural point of impact with a new bow is low and left about 4 inches off center. A few dozen shots with the bow concentrating on getting perfect form and I start grouping around the center of the target.
HickoryBill:
DON'T THINK!!Just concentrate,draw anchor,focus and release...If you try to think or "aim" you will miss
Cameroo:
I practice the way JW describes, but if you're trying to "aim", you're going to be shooting low probably all the way out to about 60 or 70 yards, depending on the bow. Self bows don't have the near-flat trajectory of those 300+ fps wheelie bows. They really lob 'em out ;D
I'd say your anchor point looks perfect myself.
PAHunter:
wow. Well that's not what I expected... Realize you guys are telling the overly analytical Dell computer guy not to think right? :) I'm not good at that. seriously. haha But I will try. I'll go shoot another 100 arrows and consentrate on my aim point. Well, this should be interesting! Thanks for the advice!!!
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