How to shoot a bow while riding a horse

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 1 чер 2023
  • Now we just need a horse!
    Watch the full episode here: • Firing Arrows Like a M...
    Merch, magic, and more only at scamstuff.com
    #prank #stunt #educational
  • Навчання та стиль

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @ModernRogue
    @ModernRogue  Рік тому +278

    🏹 Loose!
    Watch the full episode here: ua-cam.com/video/6lf9q6OQse0/v-deo.html
    Merch, magic, and more only at scamstuff.com
    #prank #stunt #educational

    • @PaKePo
      @PaKePo Рік тому

      Thank you!

    • @joshua2400
      @joshua2400 Рік тому

      Jesus Christ the sovereign God loves you my friends :" ) I hope you can personally get to to know the Holy Trinity
      God did a miracle in my life, God healed me of my chronic breathing issues that plagued me if not most nights then every single night for years
      God did this healing instantly within group prayer over my health

    • @trevorcarlisle5447
      @trevorcarlisle5447 Рік тому

      I had no idea Nick Mullen had this type of archery knowledge

    • @suniljoseph5888
      @suniljoseph5888 Рік тому +1

      Beautifully done❤🎉

    • @LoveLove-kr1iv
      @LoveLove-kr1iv Рік тому

      ​@@joshua2400😊😊

  • @RustyNinja100
    @RustyNinja100 Рік тому +13487

    I think this tech costs like 250 wood and 300 food

  • @sentinel9595
    @sentinel9595 Рік тому +5104

    American archery uses 9mm bullets

  • @ArthurNagae
    @ArthurNagae Рік тому +6742

    A few centuries of people shooting this way, many wars raged between different cultures across half the globe, and there are going to be comments on how this is not the right way to shoot

    • @thepsychedeliccartographer5765
      @thepsychedeliccartographer5765 Рік тому +43

      Yes because nobody ever used Mediterranean draw / Western archery for those things....🤡😂 i think your logic has some holes here😂

    • @maple6124
      @maple6124 Рік тому +687

      @@thepsychedeliccartographer5765 maybe i'm wrong, but i think you might have misunderstood what he was saying. he was pretty much just saying that there'll always people those people rushing in to say "nuh uh, that's not how you do that, that's bad form, he's wrong" or other similar things. he's not saying that there aren't other ways of doing it

    • @ld1065
      @ld1065 Рік тому +11

      Meh hand combat has come a long way so why not archery?

    • @bladerunner_559
      @bladerunner_559 Рік тому +62

      @@ld1065lost knowledge lookup Lars Anderson

    • @CTcCaster
      @CTcCaster Рік тому +181

      @@thepsychedeliccartographer5765 he never said Mediterranean style was wrong.
      What he saying is, there are many styles of drawing a bow, and thumb ring is not a wrong method of drawing.

  • @madytinjorj
    @madytinjorj Рік тому +855

    Brooo thumb ring from age of empires 2 makes so much more sense now

    • @SpicyPotatoe
      @SpicyPotatoe Рік тому +37

      Oh shit that's cool! Didn't even put that together while watching the video!

    • @titanayrum
      @titanayrum Рік тому +43

      aoe is so good for learning historical technologies. I always have a blast researching the Unique civ techs on google.

    • @MrRay168
      @MrRay168 9 місяців тому +3

      funny i just searched and found that romans and west european civs like franks and britons dont have access to thumb ring.

    • @ziyad6608
      @ziyad6608 5 місяців тому +1

      The name of that thumb ring is "zihgir"

    • @elee9056
      @elee9056 4 місяці тому

      ⁠@@ziyad6608🤦🏻one of many names

  • @Marnild
    @Marnild Рік тому +390

    That guy looks incredibly canadian, despite all his efforts.

    • @cthulhuman6162
      @cthulhuman6162 Рік тому +65

      Ah, have you never heard of the great horse-archer hordes of the Canadian steppe?

    • @jollygrapefruit786
      @jollygrapefruit786 Рік тому +23

      It's all the red, but the Huns were predominantly Hungarian-European, so Atilla probably looked more like a modern Hungarian man than to a Mongolian like most people seem to assume, though they were an offshoot of Asian-European tribes that intermingled in the steppes, so there was a mix.

    • @cthulhuman6162
      @cthulhuman6162 Рік тому +20

      @@jollygrapefruit786 Hungarians are not actually related to the Huns

    • @jollygrapefruit786
      @jollygrapefruit786 Рік тому

      @@cthulhuman6162 Well no that's not why they're called the Huns but Atilla was born in Hungary.

    • @cthulhuman6162
      @cthulhuman6162 Рік тому +33

      @@jollygrapefruit786 I didn’t say anything about the etymology of the word Hun, so idk why you’re talking about that. Atilla was not born in Hungary, he was originally from somewhere around what is now Russia before his invasions westward, but he did make his main camp in the Pannonian basin where Hungary now is. The ethnicity of the Huns is uncertain but they were most likely related to Turks or Scythians, or possibly a multi-ethnic confederation consisting of tribes from both groups. The Magyars (ancestors of the Hungarians who first migrated to Europe) claimed descent from the Huns due to their fame, as did many other steppe peoples, but there is no reason to believe they actually were related.
      As for how Atilla would’ve looked, contemporary Roman accounts describe him as being short, flat-nosed tan-skinned, and having “small eyes”, which likely suggests a more Asian appearance.
      Tldr know what you’re talking about before posting

  • @eyoutube1
    @eyoutube1 Рік тому +503

    The Mongolians were on a whole different level.

    • @erimkosker8118
      @erimkosker8118 Рік тому +1

      turkish people were the first ones to use bows on a horse

    • @dustinchen
      @dustinchen Рік тому +7

      he's not mongolian

    • @cryptid414
      @cryptid414 Рік тому +51

      @@dustinchenbut the technique is, look at the full video.

    • @Boatsandhoes44u8
      @Boatsandhoes44u8 Рік тому

      Seems useless to shoot that way, I don't care if they are on a horse or not

    • @marshallmykietyshyn4973
      @marshallmykietyshyn4973 Рік тому +106

      @@Boatsandhoes44u8 Genghis Khan's armies killed millions of people and took over half the world shooting like that, so I assume it works pretty well

  • @bryancline8893
    @bryancline8893 Рік тому +280

    Thumb Ring is a technology in Age of Empires II: The Conquerors available at the Archery Range upon reaching the Castle Age. Once researched, all archers (both foot and mounted) are able to fire faster and with 100% accuracy at non-moving targets. It does not affect gunpowder units.

    • @MasterArkannor
      @MasterArkannor Рік тому

      How much does it cost?

    • @CrnaStrela
      @CrnaStrela 6 місяців тому

      ​@@MasterArkannor300 food 250 wood
      Pretty hefty in early castle when you want to make tc, villagers, and farms so almost nobody research it immediately. Which is why Tatars who got it for free can afford to be very agressive while still building their economy.

  • @helixator3975
    @helixator3975 Рік тому +243

    Interestingly, Kyudo (Japanese archery) also lays the arrow on the same side of the bow and on their right hand archers wear a leather glove with a notch in the thumb

    • @randomdude4136
      @randomdude4136 Рік тому +57

      Samurai were also primarily horseback archers (They actually very rarely engaged in large melee formations), variations of this technique are just nature when shooting from the horseback

    • @Ren-lx8wv
      @Ren-lx8wv Рік тому +30

      @@randomdude4136 well early samurai started as horse archers. As the years went on they became competent foot soldiers as well Highly versed in spear and naginata combat.

    • @ramonsalvaleon2616
      @ramonsalvaleon2616 Рік тому +2

      Actually the samurais learned from the ainu tribe warfare.

    • @Kaan_is_myname97
      @Kaan_is_myname97 11 місяців тому

      Japanese and Samurai are so damn cool man. They are probably related to Central asian people such as Turks, Mongolians way way back

    • @ramonsalvaleon2616
      @ramonsalvaleon2616 11 місяців тому +1

      @@Kaan_is_myname97 Actual the japanese archery learned from the Ainu tribe long time ago.

  • @pabloandres1052
    @pabloandres1052 Рік тому +120

    So thats why cavarly archers get more acurracy after getting thumb ring in aoe2

    • @EEEEEEEE
      @EEEEEEEE 5 місяців тому

      ‎‎‎‎‎‎‎E

  • @benaloney
    @benaloney Рік тому +47

    Nick Mullen keeps surprising me with his hidden talents

  • @tekurohamada7068
    @tekurohamada7068 Рік тому +217

    I remember this episode, enjoyed it very much

    • @EEEEEEEE
      @EEEEEEEE 5 місяців тому

      E‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

  • @DubiousDubs
    @DubiousDubs Рік тому +51

    Mediterranean didn't nock on the left side of the bow either though, that's a modern invention. Look at medieval art depicting archers and it clearly shows nocking on the right side

    • @Specter_1125
      @Specter_1125 Рік тому +29

      Art shows that they did both. It was personal preference.

    • @dogrudiyosun
      @dogrudiyosun Рік тому +4

      Depends on what you understand from Mediterranean. Here it means Turkic.

    • @SaifKhagan
      @SaifKhagan Рік тому +6

      ​@@dogrudiyosunIt doesn't mean Turkic at all. He's referring to those of the Mediterranean. As in the Greeks, Roman's etc. The Turks never used the 3 finger draw.

    • @dogrudiyosun
      @dogrudiyosun Рік тому +1

      @@SaifKhagan he amk he

    • @SaifKhagan
      @SaifKhagan Рік тому +1

      @@dogrudiyosun ??

  • @deanharstad5404
    @deanharstad5404 Рік тому +23

    It’s tripping me out that every comment section on every short right now is snide and shitty, and they all have like 4 likes, whereas comments on shorts a few days ago had a bunch of actual input and had thousands of likes each. It feels like something changed in the way they sort the comments.

    • @therelatablegamer7012
      @therelatablegamer7012 Рік тому +1

      It does I’ve noticed that too

    • @michaelnace5490
      @michaelnace5490 Рік тому +3

      Ong I’m tryna chill with shorts while I download a game and the comments are making me want to start a villain arc

  • @barneylinet6602
    @barneylinet6602 Рік тому +33

    The classic Parthian shot: Releasing an arrow while facing back from the direction that your mount is going.

    • @sedatbayrak1598
      @sedatbayrak1598 10 місяців тому

      Sana hangi öküz tarih öğretti, merak ettim. Bu ok ve at üstünde geriye ok atmak tamamen bir Türk işidir. Bunun için koşum takımlarının icadı gerekir ki bunu da iranlılardan çok önceleri Türkler icat etmiş ve kullanmıştır.

  • @BrotherCarver
    @BrotherCarver Рік тому +41

    Historically, archery has been done with the arrow on the right side of the bow, it's only recently with stationary archery that we see the arrow being used on the left side. These releases aren't much different in a historical context, or at least not with the reasoning he gave.

    • @Likexner
      @Likexner Рік тому +10

      No. Historically, they put the arrow on either side.

    • @BrotherCarver
      @BrotherCarver Рік тому +5

      @@Likexner You can see it in Medieval paintings, both recreated and original, that the arrows cross over the right side of the bow. It even makes more sense just from a logical standpoint, putting the arrow on the right side of the bow requires the archer to use both eyes to assess his target, which would have given archers a greater sense for depth, especially in closer combat. In Medieval warfare this was done since archers were generally much closer to the infantry than you'd think, they couldn't feasibly use modern standards for stationary archery since they were actively a part of the battle and stationary archery is just too slow and inflexible for that level of combat. Bringing that point home, we know that Medieval archers would often keep spare arrows in their bow hand, grabbing them with their free hand and rapidly firing them, which is most comfortable to do when the arrow is knocked on the right of the bow. Even with Mongols, it's reasonable to extrapolate that they did the same thing since they heavily used mounted archers, and like the video says, you can't easily stabilize a bow on the left side when on a horse. It's generally reasonable to assume that slinging the arrow on the left side of the bow is a modern creation since it almost entirely relies on sporting conditions.

    • @Likexner
      @Likexner Рік тому +6

      @@BrotherCarver There are paintings that depict archers putting the arrow on either side.

    • @BrotherCarver
      @BrotherCarver Рік тому +3

      @@Likexner Oh, yeah I misread your comment. I meant that humans generally favored knocking the bow from the right historically, not that they only did that for the entirety of history until the modern day. Assuming I meant that knocking exclusively on the right of the bow was historically accurate is a little bit silly.

    • @skyereave9454
      @skyereave9454 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@BrotherCarverI've also seen traditional African hunting tribes have it predominantly on the left. And as they've been doing it for who knows how many generations, it's interesting that they do it that way. (The knuckle side I mean). A little extra perspective I suppose.

  • @celestialsalamander
    @celestialsalamander Рік тому +24

    this is a upgrade in AoE II.

    • @nostalji75
      @nostalji75 Рік тому +1

      Makes sense now why Britons don't have thumbring. Not sure about some other civs though.

  • @davidav8orpflanz561
    @davidav8orpflanz561 Рік тому +18

    Few people know he was also an excellent horse back riding archer -TOM THUMB!

  • @dnm1016
    @dnm1016 Рік тому +28

    Bro I been a pro at horseback archery since ocerena of time.....

  • @thelonewrangler1008
    @thelonewrangler1008 Рік тому +19

    I was in Malta many years ago and paid $40 murican dollars for a very different "Mediterranean draw"😂🤷‍♂️

  • @Doom_moose
    @Doom_moose Рік тому +64

    Oh, it's like a hook grip in weight lifting.

  • @franksalot114
    @franksalot114 Рік тому +11

    Good Cossack man

  • @darkerby9595
    @darkerby9595 Рік тому +19

    I love trivia like this.

  • @bidenonabender5903
    @bidenonabender5903 Рік тому +10

    i honestly belive medival archers also used to put the arrow on the thumb side of the bow unlike depicted in modern movies, but putting it on the knuckle side seems counter intuitive because your arrow has to go over or past the bow befor resting in place which seems like it takes far more time than it would doing it thumb side.
    i taught archery to my self and now i do it this way after doing it "wrong" for like 3 years, i became so much faster in consecutive shots!

    • @cnone3785
      @cnone3785 Рік тому

      Quiver placement seems like could make a difference in what may be easier /faster for each person. Some1 may be able to place arrow on either side of bow but may have quiver in bad spot to acc easily

    • @mikado728
      @mikado728 Рік тому

      So, thumb grip/ right of bow launch position: the string compresses the arrow at the nock, arrow bends around the bow as it launches, arrow thus clears the bow and flies oscillating wave form, mid shaft, tip and tail with two node points about 1/20 of the arrow shaft length in from tip and tail; faster, more kinetic energy because thumb grip pulls string further than fingertips, it's ~ 3-4" more bowflex potential energy

    • @TripleTapHK
      @TripleTapHK 4 місяці тому

      @@mikado728 That's not a thing. I'm an expert archer.

    • @mikado728
      @mikado728 4 місяці тому

      @@TripleTapHK
      LOL ! Legend in your own mind; try it, you'll like it. Don't let your arrogant self-righteousness scuttle your learning. Still laughing at you.

  • @Eligus33
    @Eligus33 Рік тому +10

    I thought I invented that when I was a kid😂

    • @AdamNisenziSpisak
      @AdamNisenziSpisak Рік тому +2

      Well if you did it by yourself without any external influence, you technicaly did :D

  • @David_Quinn_Photography
    @David_Quinn_Photography Рік тому +11

    Now I am currious I gotta try shooting this way.

    • @Arthiem
      @Arthiem Рік тому +1

      It will hurt at first. Do a light bow first.

  • @lindsey607
    @lindsey607 Рік тому +21

    Brilliant!!

  • @mojoschmee9320
    @mojoschmee9320 Рік тому +2

    This is the kind of information my brain will load and never let go of...

  • @firstswordcorvus7368
    @firstswordcorvus7368 Рік тому +20

    Interesting, but still would like to see an actual demonstration at work

    • @Diz3sty
      @Diz3sty Рік тому

      ua-cam.com/users/shortscZ2SgxMep14?feature=share
      Same technique pretty much

    • @ModernRogue
      @ModernRogue  Рік тому +2

      click on the original video link in the description!

  • @douglaswegener6463
    @douglaswegener6463 Рік тому +8

    Absolutely brilliant

  • @raytribble8075
    @raytribble8075 Рік тому +8

    Hence the term “plucking” the arrow which morphed into “pluck you” which morphed into… well you get the picture…

  • @existentialvoid
    @existentialvoid Рік тому +14

    same for Japanese Kyudo btw. . .
    we also do 'tsurugaeshi' or - return of the bowstring . . . if you do it right, the entire bow rotates to clear the string from your swordhand

    • @skyereave9454
      @skyereave9454 7 місяців тому

      Is it the same principles as Khatra or a different intention altogether? I do the Korean style so it has similar principles to nomadic archery.

  • @jackmcmorrow9397
    @jackmcmorrow9397 Рік тому +32

    Mongolians said "Hold this L westerner"

    • @Judge_Magister
      @Judge_Magister Рік тому +1

      The Mongols never reached the “west”, they were cut down by knights since the Mongols were actually terribly bad fighters.

    • @jackmcmorrow9397
      @jackmcmorrow9397 Рік тому

      @@Judge_Magister I mean they got to poland, thats pretty far into eastern europe.

    • @Judge_Magister
      @Judge_Magister Рік тому

      @@jackmcmorrow9397 historical Poland lay much further to the east into modern day Belarus, Ukraine and Russia. Modern day Poland was moved considerably to the west after ww2. Its territory consists around half of former German lands. The only European nation that truly suffered some time under the Mongol raids were the Russians but as you can see on a map today there is a good reason Russia extends so far to the east. Vladivostok the most eastward city in Russia literally means “rule the east” as in never again suffer attacks from those nomadic barbarians. Russia used to control much of Mongolia too the same goes for China they striped a large part of the territory of Mongolia as China too suffered much under the Mongols.

    • @adamhatton7579
      @adamhatton7579 Рік тому +1

      @@Judge_Magister I love how bitter you are about an extinct empire. You’re probably descended from one of them.

    • @Judge_Magister
      @Judge_Magister Рік тому

      @@adamhatton7579 bitter about what? I was just stating some historical footnotes. I hail from the Netherlands from a family of farmers and traders so i doubt it. Anyone with a bit of historical knowledge can see the Mongols for what they are, a greedy, sadistic and destructive force who were terrible in building and maintaining an empire.

  • @alexsass6539
    @alexsass6539 Рік тому +6

    Medieval archers also shot it from the right side of the bow

    • @TripleTapHK
      @TripleTapHK 4 місяці тому +1

      Some did. Not most.

    • @Janibek35
      @Janibek35 2 місяці тому

      There is no cut and dry answer on that. There were many different ways to shoot.

  • @azure_paladin4706
    @azure_paladin4706 Рік тому +7

    I wonder if at any point in history someone just said screw it and threw the arrow. Killing the target in glorious fashion.

    • @UwU-235
      @UwU-235 Рік тому +11

      That’s called a spear

    • @gradesam6306
      @gradesam6306 Рік тому

      there's apparently a thing called plumbata, war darts

    • @samuelmendoza9356
      @samuelmendoza9356 Рік тому

      There is also the Swiss Arrow but it needs a string that wraps around the shaft and tied to its notch. It has the same setup as the amentum used on javelins, they are throwing aid that allows it to act like a sling

  • @davidjohn6411
    @davidjohn6411 Рік тому +4

    I remember him getting irritated when you dry fired his bow.

    • @MaxxterDM
      @MaxxterDM Рік тому +7

      Can't blame him. Dry-firing a bow does a number on the limbs, and can, overtime, lead to catastrophic failure.
      Source? Personal experience. Wrecked the cam bearing on my compound bow when I accidentally dry-fired it. That was on me though for not checking on my equipment; caliper release didn't lock all the way so the loop slipped through. Lesson learned.

    • @sterlinggecko3269
      @sterlinggecko3269 Рік тому

      @@MaxxterDM my cousin had his compound pop on him. the nocks they gave him were too tight, so it chewed up the string. no noticeable damage, though, just a pair of what looked like vampire hamster marks where his wrist got tagged by something flailing.

    • @MaxxterDM
      @MaxxterDM Рік тому +1

      @sterlinggecko3269 Ooh, ouch. I can only imagine how shocking it was when the string snapped. Glad to hear he got away with only a slap on the wrist.

    • @Janibek35
      @Janibek35 2 місяці тому

      And if it's a horn composite bow, it can outright explode for what that's worth.

  • @quinnmoore5985
    @quinnmoore5985 Рік тому +5

    Ice been shooting arrows since I was a little kid, genuinely never knew people used their thumbs outside a trigger lmao.

  • @gwilliams1776
    @gwilliams1776 Рік тому +4

    Most interesting youtube short in a while.

  • @harvestcanada
    @harvestcanada Рік тому +2

    In dry condition horse Archer of the East were the most fear warrior in the Ancient and medieval world...... .. Except when it was raining or snowing. The composite bow was very sensitive to wet conditions.

    • @Janibek35
      @Janibek35 2 місяці тому

      There are ways to make composite bows water-resistant.

  • @SteveSiegelin
    @SteveSiegelin Рік тому +2

    Okay, seeing you switch the arrow to the other side makes me realize that you're shooting more like I do then most other people. I am a left-handed shooter but I shoot right-handed bows, I always put the arrow on the other side and I don't use sites. It's hard to find a good left-handed bows it's not super expensive so I don't even use the arrow rest, I use the knuckle of my thumb just like you do but I use my pointer and middle finger to draw back the bow. I do not use gloves or forearm protectors because they get in the way when I'm hunting.

    • @SteveSiegelin
      @SteveSiegelin Рік тому

      I've also been known to outshoot people with their own bow just by taking the bow and flipping it upside down so that I can shoot it in my left😂

    • @johnfairchild3421
      @johnfairchild3421 Рік тому

      Just. Hit. What you aiming at. And that Archery

    • @TripleTapHK
      @TripleTapHK 4 місяці тому

      You realize real archers can tell you have no idea what you are talking about right?

    • @SteveSiegelin
      @SteveSiegelin 4 місяці тому

      @@TripleTapHK that means that you're not a lefty and you've never gone to the struggles that I do. Try shooting right-handed equipment as a left-handed individual. I have taught myself to be ambidextrous but there's certain things you have to do if you're going to shoot someone someone else's equipment upside down because you can't change anything. I became very proficient at it. I'm just as accurate as a right-handed person with a right-handed bow even though I'm shooting holding my left hand and the bow is flipped upside down. Because of this I can't use the arrow rest, I have to use my finger. Don't dare say that people who shoot are going to say I don't because I've been shooting for over 30 years. I have dropped hogs and deer with my bow. I am proficient enough to make a heart shot. What have you killed with your archery equipment? My lethality is there. I've also cleaned everything that I've ever killed and had to clean game for other friends who have never done it before so that they could learn. I literally grew up in the woods.

  • @Sam_on_YouTube
    @Sam_on_YouTube Рік тому +217

    With the western draw done correctly, you don't need to stabilize the arrow. The string rotates as you draw and pushes it against the bow on the arrow rest. Now if you need to draw quickly while riding, I could see how the thumb side for an arrow rest would be helpful and in that case, the same draw technique would instead pull the arrow right off the bow. So his technique will rotate the string the other way and hold it to the thumb side.
    You could do an upside down 2 finger grip. That would have the same effect. And it is similar to how you often pull back when using a trigger release on a compound bow. Just gotta make sure you're grabing the string from the opposite side of the arrow and allowing the natural rotation of the string rather than forcing it to be straight. Same principle either way.

    • @ArcherInTraining2
      @ArcherInTraining2 Рік тому +9

      Thank you this method is just an easy bypass instead of practicing your technique

    • @c2mewhen
      @c2mewhen Рік тому

      He’s not gonna fuck you

    • @TheSuperSpud
      @TheSuperSpud Рік тому +6

      Especially since historical archers, like those on horseback had most of the time to fire rapidly

    • @WarPoet-In-Training
      @WarPoet-In-Training Рік тому +12

      I shot competitive archery (bare bow, no sights as well) for years. Unless your using some special kind of arrows, the nock on the end of the arrow would not have enough grip to rotate with the string. Its just not that tight. In addition to that, whether your using a release aid or not, the string doesn't rotate to one side or another when you draw. You're pulling it straight back, not back and rotating in.

    • @RealHankShill
      @RealHankShill Рік тому +2

      I cant imagine a time, when riding on horseback, that shooting fast wouldnt be the priority

  • @Erraddo
    @Erraddo Рік тому +7

    There are Europeanmedieval depictions of archers using a multitude of methods. Both sides, 2-3 fingers, thumb or no thumb, fingers fown or raised while nocking...

    • @skyereave9454
      @skyereave9454 7 місяців тому +1

      Whatever hits the target most often for them I suppose.

  • @NS-Sherlock
    @NS-Sherlock Рік тому +2

    I don't know if it came out of Turkic nations but i guess no one used and mastered it as much. Biggest empire in the world was built with the help of it.

  • @PDilling
    @PDilling Рік тому +1

    I can practically hear the archer gatekeepers scream. XD

    • @TripleTapHK
      @TripleTapHK 4 місяці тому

      Real archers are well aware of eastern styles of archery. It's the general public who has no clue about this kind of stuff.

  • @nigsbalchin226
    @nigsbalchin226 Рік тому +11

    Western archery also placed the arrow on the right side of the bow, resting on the thumb.
    Placing the arrow on the top of the forefinger knuckle is a modern thing.

    • @sterlinggecko3269
      @sterlinggecko3269 Рік тому

      when I revered the arrow side, it'd kick my shots 2 feet right at 20 yards. unless I did my draw hand upside down, which didn't feel right. I was shooting with bare fingers.

    • @andrzejgolota6642
      @andrzejgolota6642 Рік тому

      this, there are tons of medieval drawings showing archers using the right side

    • @skyereave9454
      @skyereave9454 7 місяців тому +1

      ​@@andrzejgolota6642 Plenty with the opposite as well. I'm guessing it wasn't really a standardized thing. I've actually seen paintings/tapestries where people are doing one or the other in the same picture.

  • @andrewstrongman305
    @andrewstrongman305 Рік тому +3

    I was never taught archery, but when I used a bow as a kid I instinctively held the arrow with my left thumb. Otherwise I'd have had to shoot around the bow, which didn't make sense to me.

    • @TripleTapHK
      @TripleTapHK 4 місяці тому

      Either side you put the arrow on, you are still shooting around the bow.

  • @mikec4308
    @mikec4308 Рік тому +4

    I already learned how to do this in Ocarina of Time

  • @jowolf2187
    @jowolf2187 Рік тому +6

    My only gripe is that there's no such thing as "American archery".

    • @jowolf2187
      @jowolf2187 Рік тому +1

      @@LostNEggsAisle-tm5zr No my reason for griping is that American archery isn't a thing. The first nations all used bows, but they used them in the same manner as the Mongols (same grip and shorter bows). So calling it "American" is rather capricious. Furthermore, the bow was not universal in the Americas - the Aztecs, Mayans, Incas, etc. of Meso America and South America largely continued to use darts, atlatls, and spears over bows because said weapons were more effective in the tight quarters of the dense rainforests in their respective territories.

  • @vidafterdark
    @vidafterdark Рік тому +6

    What are the different gear pieces called? Finger guards? Ring? New terminology.

  • @MrRobinprice
    @MrRobinprice Рік тому +6

    American????? Ha ha ha ha

  • @jernejicom
    @jernejicom Рік тому +31

    American archery looolllll

    • @AnAmericanMusician
      @AnAmericanMusician Рік тому +17

      Indians had plenty of archery. I'm not sure what's so funny. 🤔

    • @okruma625
      @okruma625 Рік тому +14

      Indigenous Americans did plenty of archery before the firearms trade took over, and even then...

    • @supremecoctus3201
      @supremecoctus3201 Рік тому +8

      Another example of someone who doesn’t know history lmao

    • @Janibek35
      @Janibek35 2 місяці тому

      American arrows come in varying sizes. 9mm, 30-06, 50 BMG, etc...

  • @davidsandberg3109
    @davidsandberg3109 Рік тому +1

    Today I learned I've always been shooting horseback style

    • @Janibek35
      @Janibek35 2 місяці тому

      There is no one horseback style. There are many ways to shoot.

  • @commenter621
    @commenter621 Рік тому +1

    Hes not "modernrogue" now hes "medievalrogue"

  • @stevendavis3991
    @stevendavis3991 Рік тому +6

    Ummm. I. From the usa and I been using someone else's country style. Wtf

  • @mechatengu7368
    @mechatengu7368 Рік тому +6

    When i was a little lad, i got a little toy boy (an actual bow in the sense it doesn't use elastic strings and stuff) and I'd draw that thing liks how this man would draw his bow. I thought i waa doing it wrong the entire time when i saw films where they were doing the Mediterranean draw; i guess there's always other ways in doing things

    • @Thomas_420
      @Thomas_420 Рік тому +2

      Man my dad made me bows out of sticks and strings and then carve the arrows with 4 fins and I would always lose them because he would have me aim at blackberry bushes and then we wouldn’t go get them 🥲 good memories

  • @dennsd.6335
    @dennsd.6335 Рік тому

    This man's accent keeps coming and going like the different hand positions

  • @gabriellockwood2780
    @gabriellockwood2780 Рік тому +3

    That bow looked like the Phrenic Bow from BotW/Tears of the Kingdom

  • @FirstOfHisNameSolaire
    @FirstOfHisNameSolaire Рік тому +6

    Was this a regional thing? Or did all horse mounted archer develop this technique?

    • @stonedape3285
      @stonedape3285 Рік тому +4

      There are multiple different mounted archer techniques.

    • @ReepsWasteOfTime
      @ReepsWasteOfTime Рік тому +1

      This is a regional/bow type thing. Compound and recurve don’t change much on horse back

    • @barnabasfarakas7376
      @barnabasfarakas7376 Рік тому +3

      It had variations, but it was probably common among steppe peoples. It's written that the Magyars shot like this in the 9. century. 300 years later, Mongolians arrive and do it the same way.
      Which is not surprising. Riding and archery were the main skills in these cultures, so they had extremely good technique developed.

  • @stuffstuff7711
    @stuffstuff7711 Рік тому

    This man understood the assignment

  • @LaughingJokerProd
    @LaughingJokerProd Рік тому +1

    Got to love how despite the technology for bow being found in almost all cultures, the way to actually use it differed

    • @0Synergy
      @0Synergy Рік тому

      Another weird one is sabres basically every ended up using them.

    • @sterlinggecko3269
      @sterlinggecko3269 Рік тому

      everything is a spear. a bow is just a spear, but the guy you want to stab is way over there.

    • @0Synergy
      @0Synergy Рік тому

      @@sterlinggecko3269 bullets are just tiny spears also.

  • @shanedavid9923
    @shanedavid9923 Рік тому +13

    “American Archery” 😂😂😂😂

    • @bomcuming3007
      @bomcuming3007 Рік тому +4

      Yea natives, Like south America north America he didn’t specifically say what americas

    • @rhondaparr5739
      @rhondaparr5739 Рік тому

      he should be saying European not American

  • @Shepherdd__
    @Shepherdd__ Рік тому +19

    Didn't know there was such thing as "American archery"

    • @SteveGBD
      @SteveGBD Рік тому +12

      That's cause the natives where almost extinct

    • @SuicideMike5150
      @SuicideMike5150 Рік тому +5

      American Archery has since evolved to where we have given up on silly string pulling and now we just pull the F’n trigger. 😂

    • @Shepherdd__
      @Shepherdd__ Рік тому +9

      @@SteveGBD Wow. I just realised thanks to you that I completely forgot about native americans for a moment (I French btw, don't judge me)

    • @SteveGBD
      @SteveGBD Рік тому +1

      @@SuicideMike5150 LMAO

    • @SurfistaEletrico
      @SurfistaEletrico Рік тому

      ​@@SteveGBD Yes, but also no. The natives were not americans. The land was not called america before the arrival of european settlers. 😉

  • @amrullahsatria1762
    @amrullahsatria1762 10 місяців тому +1

    "Why is ist different?" Well the mongol have an extravagantly huge empire for a reason

  • @DangDutHomeboy
    @DangDutHomeboy Рік тому +1

    I do that in Foam Archery. We call it the "Thumb draw"

  • @greentoke4589
    @greentoke4589 Рік тому +9

    I actually learned something off the internet today. 😁👍💯

  • @Skenderbeuismyhero
    @Skenderbeuismyhero Рік тому +4

    I've watched modern horse archers in mogolia shooting off the left side of the bow with three fingers

    • @patrickbueno3279
      @patrickbueno3279 Рік тому +2

      modern people might practice modern techniques or they are just far apart that their tribes has preference

    • @Skenderbeuismyhero
      @Skenderbeuismyhero Рік тому

      @@patrickbueno3279 and ancient techniques and who used them aren't often recorded.

  • @bossbullyboy195
    @bossbullyboy195 Рік тому

    When I was a kid I used to rest on my thumb side and draw with the post fletch. After being corrected I had to relearn how to aim again

  • @lemagicbaguette1917
    @lemagicbaguette1917 11 місяців тому

    I just read “How to shoot a horse whilst riding a bow.”
    I need to go back to sleep.

  • @johnmarquardt1991
    @johnmarquardt1991 Рік тому +5

    Growing up in the US, I used the L.

    • @NiVoldiza
      @NiVoldiza Рік тому +2

      Growing up in the US _is_ an L.

  • @SnowHoof
    @SnowHoof Рік тому +5

    Couldn't the arrow the part laying on the bow slide up and down the bow if not resting on the thumb? Especially when riding?

    • @HuchiaZ
      @HuchiaZ Рік тому

      Your index finger is pressuring the arrow to the handle and string of the bow in a perpendicular force. So while riding you might have the arrow move away from the handle slightly due to force but it would be very small and you'd likely have counterforce from your handle arm to minimise this further.
      With the Mediterranean draw you only have pressure on the arrow between the soft flesh of your two fingers on the string, so gravity is the only thing pressuring the arrow. If you shake any part of it the string becomes the fulcrum point of a lever-like movement. So you could pressure the arrow, but it would only keep it knocked since you can't really pressure the shaft -thus the tip still bounces around the string even if you use counterforce.

  • @LivingBreathing
    @LivingBreathing Рік тому

    The hand and finger strength to fully draw a bow held by just the thumb and forefinger...holy

  • @BlazeTheDragon1996
    @BlazeTheDragon1996 10 місяців тому

    I've been wanting to learn archery for a while now I'm glad I found this

  • @PickledPixiePie
    @PickledPixiePie Рік тому +11

    Oh... Yeah, that makes sense. I've never used the 3 finger crap. I've always naturally shot using my thumb, and I've always had great accuracy with that. However, if my arrows are on the outside of the bow, they go out into "left field". I have to use the inside. However, next time I'm going to try holding it horizontally like a crossbow like this guy does.

    • @Specter_1125
      @Specter_1125 Рік тому +2

      It’s not crap. The Mediterranean draw works perfectly for what’s its for, and if you know what you’re doing, you can knock the arrow on either side of the bow. Also, holding it horizontally will drastically shorten your draw length.

    • @PickledPixiePie
      @PickledPixiePie Рік тому +1

      @@Specter_1125 I mean, to each their own, but when I try it, crap is the result. It just doesn't feel natural to me.

    • @PickledPixiePie
      @PickledPixiePie Рік тому

      @@Specter_1125 If I were a man, I might agree. However, I feel like the female physiology is a lot more flexible when it comes to being able to twist to compensate, like in the case of mounted combat. I could be wrong, though. I just feel like it might not be as drastic with someone's who's more flexible.

    • @TripleTapHK
      @TripleTapHK 4 місяці тому

      Your arrows peel away from the bow because you aren't actually using a real thumb draw to pinch the arrow against your bow. You are just drawing your bow with your thumb which if it works for you it works, but it aint gonna work for horseback archery. Crap results with Mediterranean draw is 100% a skill issue.

  • @carllachance3512
    @carllachance3512 Рік тому +3

    I will have to try this

  • @zereneedmonds3955
    @zereneedmonds3955 Рік тому

    Why is it different right after he just explained it 😆 🤣

  • @armadillotoe
    @armadillotoe Рік тому +2

    It is always good to learn something new.

  • @J.Severin
    @J.Severin Рік тому +2

    awesome explained, thx. :)

  • @erikzorger3311
    @erikzorger3311 Рік тому +4

    shooting this way hurts and takes getting used to.

    • @veraducks
      @veraducks Рік тому +3

      Shooting in general hurts and takes getting used to.

    • @clothar23
      @clothar23 Рік тому

      Might want to invest in a bracer if shooting a bow is causing you pain.

  • @baconweave5159
    @baconweave5159 Рік тому

    Feel like I fought this dude's ancestors in Kingdom Come: Deliverance

  • @bashkillszombies
    @bashkillszombies Рік тому +1

    "Why is it different?" He comes up with a cool story. But the real reason is their bows are 1% the power of an English yew bow.

  • @christopherfisher128
    @christopherfisher128 Рік тому +10

    It's different from Anglo archery. Many Americans grew up learning several release techniques

    • @cam6202
      @cam6202 Рік тому

      Yeah they where on a moving horse, completely different bow and style.

    • @christopherfisher128
      @christopherfisher128 Рік тому +2

      @@cam6202 Different from the Anglos yes but the American Indians of the Plains and West/South West were some of the finest horse archers in history and used a different release than either.

    • @sterlinggecko3269
      @sterlinggecko3269 Рік тому +1

      @@christopherfisher128 because they didn't get horses until after Europeans showed up, so they probably didn't just relearn everything from square one.

  • @davestir5743
    @davestir5743 Рік тому +4

    Having the arrow on the thumb side is also easier to nock the arrow while riding, especially when you have to use either hand to shoot your bow as targets on either side of the track means you are swapping which arm. We were taught to use both hands equally since you never know which side of the horse the enemy will be on.

  • @PrEdAtOr2k
    @PrEdAtOr2k Рік тому

    It is beautiful to hear something so well explained.

  • @markabrian1925
    @markabrian1925 Рік тому +1

    Remember when one of the hosts dry fired the instructors bow and he got a bit upset?

  • @josefstrauss9017
    @josefstrauss9017 Рік тому +12

    Cancer comment section 4 real

  • @nhankhuu5643
    @nhankhuu5643 Рік тому +10

    It's the superior technique. You get center and most direct transfer of energy too.

    • @TripleTapHK
      @TripleTapHK 4 місяці тому

      Has nothing to do with that. Mongolians even shot from the left side of the bow when on the ground. Shooting from the right with the thumb draw is primarily a horseback archery technique.

  • @sammakesstuff4176
    @sammakesstuff4176 Рік тому

    This simple difference in technique combined with their specialized saddles were a game changer on par with the invention of firearms

  • @miyama8936
    @miyama8936 Рік тому +6

    Heavy Archers also had the arrow on the outer side since it is easier to draw the bow like that if it has a high draw weight.

    • @TripleTapHK
      @TripleTapHK 4 місяці тому +1

      Having the arrow on either side of the bow has literally zero affect on draw weight.

  • @holographicpestosauce
    @holographicpestosauce Рік тому +3

    love it but i’ve seen this video like 3 years ago. new shorts

  • @TylerClear
    @TylerClear Рік тому

    Instructions unclear, domed my horse, and ended up a prisoner of war

  • @Darkenixx
    @Darkenixx Рік тому

    So that's how the Dothraki from Game of Thrones do their bow shooting on horseback!

  • @AB-nb2ic
    @AB-nb2ic Рік тому +12

    Isn't American archery whatever the native American archers did? Lol at everyone in this thread who thinks he's talking about Europeans who moved to America and mainly used guns in combat.

    • @TVbasick
      @TVbasick Рік тому +2

      The Europeans are the reason horses were in America

    • @tommydashed4205
      @tommydashed4205 Рік тому

      @@TVbasick Huh?

    • @74nova36
      @74nova36 Рік тому

      @@tommydashed4205 horses aren’t native to America dummy

    • @Janibek35
      @Janibek35 2 місяці тому

      ​@@tommydashed4205
      Yes. They are largely descended from horses that escaped Spanish captivity.

  • @woodsy3495
    @woodsy3495 Рік тому +3

    The inventers of the "parting shot". Riding a running horse with no hands and turning to face backwards and sending an arrow at any pursuers. Changed warfare.

  • @makukawakami
    @makukawakami 10 місяців тому

    That explains why kyudo also does this kind of form as well. The samurai were mounted archers way back then

  • @oliverburton6927
    @oliverburton6927 Рік тому

    My girlfriend already knows about my Mediterranean drawback 🙃

  • @markopolo1271
    @markopolo1271 Рік тому +13

    As someone who's been into archery and used both normal recurve bows and Mongolian bows I can say Mongolian archery is so much fkn harder especially if you're already used to using the other form of archery before you try and learn mongolian archery because it's just miles different and a whole load more awkward sure you get the hang of it eventually but it takes some time to get adjusted

    • @Rafael_R
      @Rafael_R Рік тому +1

      It's funny that I actually learned the thumb draw first, in eastern archery classes. Trying to do it the mediterranean way was much more difficult for me.

    • @markopolo1271
      @markopolo1271 Рік тому

      @@Rafael_R I can understand that because learning to ditch old muscle memory habits is just hard in general but I feel like in comparison it would take you drastically less time to learn how to do archery proficiently with a Mediterranean draw than it would for me to be able to even become semi proficient with a Mongolian draw.
      Simply because it's just that different specifically the fact that you don't aim down the arrow with the Mongolian style and just go purely off of instinct and the grip on the string is just really awkward compared to the European grip because it's all in the thumb and forefinger which in its own benefit does make the release that much smoother but it just makes for one hell of a steep learning curve in comparison.
      Whereas once you're used to the 3 fingered European draw you've pretty much got it
      the rest is just putting reps in to get the muscle memory down and perfecting your form.
      Sure it's not gonna be easy to learn either form
      from the ground up but I know I'd much rather have learnt the Mongolian draw first myself.

  • @trianime
    @trianime Рік тому +4

    This feels unnatural for me, i need to practice this more

    • @tomjohnson5713
      @tomjohnson5713 Рік тому

      Me too i just cant seem to draw with my thumb without nearly dislocating my nuckle

    • @richardjohnson1891
      @richardjohnson1891 Рік тому

      I'm just wondering how many pounds that bow is I'm shooting a 64 pound Osage orange handmade bow and I don't see being able to hold the weight at draw with this technique.

    • @Janibek35
      @Janibek35 2 місяці тому

      ​​@@richardjohnson1891
      Hard to say what his bow weight is. Perhaps close to yours... 🤷‍♂️. Some of the hardcore guys shoot 160 pounds or higher.
      In the context of Eastern archery, use your shoulders, with the thumb draw. Many archers actually start from a slightly raised position, if you can grasp that. It helps to watch videos of people shooting in Manchu, Turkish, Arab, etc. styles. Also, starting with a very light weight bow is practically necessary when learning the technique.

  • @danielsz8222
    @danielsz8222 Рік тому

    Wow i'm impressed unfortunatly very few people know the correct way to shoot an arrow in steppen style
    Huge respect

  • @allthebanter9316
    @allthebanter9316 Рік тому +1

    In addition, western bows didn’t need to be as compact because they were a dismounted weapon, and so could be substantially larger and stronger, the Welsh and English longbows, some of the most powerful bows to every exist, had an average draw weight of 120 lbs up to 200lbs, while the average recurve like the one in this video had an average draw weight of 75 lbs up to 115lbs, and as such a stronger and firmer grip would be necessary to draw effectively

    • @0Synergy
      @0Synergy Рік тому

      Whats crazy though is how dense their arm bones were from fracturing all the time.

    • @allthebanter9316
      @allthebanter9316 Рік тому

      @@0Synergy I wasn’t aware of that, that’s insane

  • @RazagalArtanis
    @RazagalArtanis Рік тому +4

    Traditional old Western draw the arrow is also on the righthand side of the bow.