I am in the same camp. While the compound bow is a precision machine it's also a rather difficult to service one. I went for a single piece recurve for the simplicity of maintenance. String it, check brace height, wax the string, check for mechanical issues. That's it. No timing adjustment, no sight adjustment. Just me, the bow, arrow and the target. If I miss (or shoot crap like I usually do) it's all on me.
@ in a grid down scenario which considering the state of the country lately it's quite possible what happens if your compound breaks are you capable of fixing it yourself? I mean I can carve a bow literally by finding the right tree and using my knife it's not anything special but it'll get the job done or you can always make one out of PVC which I'm sure they'll still be plenty of that hanging around. But when something goes wrong how difficult is it to actually repair or do you have to take it somewhere?
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@@davidbeaulieu4815 Like I said, I've only had to have serious repairs done once, in the past 40-odd years I've had it, and I bought it used in a yard sale. I'd say its about as "bulletproof" as can be. And if something catastrophic happens to my compound, I can probably hack out a rough bow, or find another somewhere.
@ can confirm only ever had 1 limb crack and that's because it was bouncing around in the back of the truck with some tools while we were off road(forgot to put it back in the case), other then that never needed to cam stuff or anything. Its all simple stuff but alot of people seem to complicate things.
Being traditionally minded, I find compound bows to not be particularly aesthetically appealing, they indeed look like some kind of complex machinery. No offence to compound users, you do your thing.
I personally really like the aesthetics of some compound bows, but I see them as a totally different tool than a recurve bow. Compound bow looks more like guns, which I also like the aesthetics. Recurve bows usually look more like traditional bows, and I also like that.
not an asian here, I'm a middle school kid right now and since I've been getting good grades for a long time, they held high standards for me, just don't know when my parents are actually going to accept the fact that I can't and will not be maintaining A's all the time when everyone has expectations and you don't live up to them it hurts..
I am an engineer by profession and the simplicity of traditonal or barebow recurve appeals to me as I do enough tingkering on my job and I just want to shoot some targets.
I shoot both and its really not that complicated all i had to do is get my arrow rest in the right position and (took less the 5 shots to get it right and another 5 or so to get the sight lined up) has been shooting straight for 8 yrs now. Even when i changed to carbon arrows it still shot the same( besides drop) and when i upped my broad heads to 150gr, it is a cheap compound bow aswell bow as well.
I shoot a Hungarian, a recurve and a compound but my favorite is compound. Your explanation is very much spot on and understandable. This is what makes archery such a fine sport. Thank you.
I think a compound bow is about two steps away from a crossbow, which might as well be a gun. Recurve bows, on the other hand, are more simple. I find it incredibly pleasing to know that I could take what amounts to a stick and some hair, and fling a sharper stick 50 yards away into a target, perfectly. I wouldn't feel the same about a gun, or a crossbow, or a compound. I would say it roughly goes... knife throwing -> axe throwing -> slinging -> barebow -> recurve -> recurve with sight -> compound bow -> crossbow -> gun -> explosive ...in order of "most satisfaction with hitting the target."
I started out using a compound. Then one day I saw a women at an indoor range and she was destroying a bulls eye at ten yards with a plain one piece bow, so I talked to her and the next time I went to that indoor range I rented a recurve and fell in love the first time I hit the bulls eye which was probably fifty shots in. I found that even though it was harder it was much more satisfying and challenging. The compound was more like shooting a rifle but the free style was more like learning to throw a ball. I sold my compound, bought a recurve and twenty years later I haven't looked back.
Interesting story! While I like technical development and improvements I think that it can go to far. A compound with all technical features does hardly feel like a bow but a machine.
Had the bow set up at a pro shop. It performed just fine ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxQEKUoxLWwayEDZR0NKB-5limn4MBU-2L . And I would say this is a good starting now that I could pass down to my son when he is older.But the package was missing the release and a nock was missing from one arrow.Dealing with customer support was terrible. They suggested I buy a new release rather than correct their own quality control issue because it’s to expensive for the. to ship it out from China.Update: manufacturer got back to me and resolved the issue. I retract the above statement.
I like re-curve. I enjoy the ritual of the stringing so that I can feel the bow through my whole body. I like the feel of the power building in the draw. I like the awareness that my whole body is engaged with the aim. I like how I must project to the target and make it part of me. For me, archery is a method of joining with the world. Most machines don't help with that.
Hi I am a newbie to archery at the age 75. What you're saying is just the way I am thinking. We are fortunate to have enough ground around the house to do archery I'm so glad I found your videos. Thanks for putting them up.🇬🇧👍🙋♀️
Yeah, I'm in the "stick and string" old school archery camp, but I'm not the kind of gatekeeper purist that says that anything else isn't "real" archery. Framing it in a context of real or not real seems like a pointless debate. Although making a distinction between historical and modern archery isn't without merit. If folks want to shoot compound, great for them. I just don't want anything to do with it. It's kind of like electric and acoustic guitar. They're both real instruments and just because one has been around for much longer, saying that the newer type isn't a "real" guitar would just be silly.
It was compound that initially attracted me to archery. I am fascinated by the man/machine interaction interaction of archery, the physics of arrow flight and the way the different materials work together. And I'm a gear freak - and compound sure does tick that box (sorry wallet). I also shoot Olympic recurve, but not competitively. I find it meditative and obviously much more difficult than compound - but it trains and helps me maintain form which has improved my compound scores more than anything. Even more than my latest three hundred dollar release just added to the collection... I admire all archers and respect all forms of our sport, but nothing sounds better than arrows slapping together in the x ring at 70 metres, and at my age I realistically will never achieve that with a recurve in my lifetime. I am genuinely surprised and entertained by hate that compound shooters get from others... It reminds me of the Melbourne/Sydney 'rivalry' - you only hear about it in Melbourne ;) Yours is the best archery channel on the 'tube, keep up the good work!
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@@dislikebutton1935 IMHO, I think it amounts to equipment snobbery on the part of "traditional" archers. You here the same sort of thing in gun circles. "You don't 'need' that type of gun! Only bad guys have that! All you really need is ( fill in the blank with their preferred gun)." If we don't stand together, no matter what type of bow, gun, or whatever, those who aren't interested, or downright hostile towards us will pick us off one by one, until eventually you can't have or do anything "they" find disagreeable!
To me, a compound bow is basically an alternative crossbow. While neat, asking someone why they don't shoot compound bows, would be like asking someone why they don't shoot a crossbow. And to me, I think the answer lies in not wanting to shoot a "mechanical device," that is something that looks more like a mechanistic contraption. Not that crossbows and compound bows aren't cool in their own way, but I think the appeal to those who prefer a more primitive bow, is wanting to be kind of getting back to nature, and simpler times, and away from the hustle and bustle of modern life, and returning to simplicity. A good comparison might be people who like to go car camping, vs. people who like to go backpacking. For some, the appeal is getting away from the mechanical things.
I agree. The physical process and muscle development is not the same with compounds. I like the look of traditional bows more. If need be, a person can build a traditional bow and feed their family, versus when your compound breaks you're 'dead in the water' so to speak due to a vast majority of compound shooters don't know how to work on/repair their own equipment, let alone having those parts available. With traditional bows, you earn your 8, 9, 10, and X. Compounds are easier to draw and hold (with let-off), aim and shoot, so the 10 and X is more 'expected'. So to ME, it feels like cheating or taking a shortcut. You don't standout from having to earn the 10's and X's, like a traditional or recurve. EDIT There's a barebow recurve shooter (with a 36#) at my indoor range who consistently goes against 15+ compound shooters at the Friday night shootouts, and 95% of the time he whips them and takes home the money.....and the compound shooters can't stand it. He always shoots 295+ at 20yds. He EARNED that skill set. His gear wasn't dialed in so he can hit that score in a week or 2 of shooting, like a compound.
I have watched a number of your videos and I must say that I appreciate the education that you impart (the Sensei side), the inclusive nature that you bring (I think to the Survival Lilly video), and the instructional side (back to the sensei again) - you are extremely balanced and measured in the things that you say - again - much appreciated. I'm only a recreational shooter that always shot compound but have recently discovered that traditional aspect and am running one of the Toth horse bows at this point. I find it challenging from an instinctive and gap shooting aspect as well as relaxing....nothing like going to the back yard and sending a hundred or more arrows down range.
You helped me understand why I enjoy traditional bow shooting over compound bows. It's the simplicity of it. Sure, you can get more accuracy, more distance, with less skill in less time with a compound. It's more rewarding to attempt to get similar results with a simple long bow or recurve along with the personal training it takes to use use them.
That's why I'm still stuck on my English Longbow :) I learned on a (simple) olympic recurve, but with a sight it wasn't challenging me enough. I'll never get a very high score, but seeing people's frustration sometimes, I'm just happy missing the target half the time and having fun!
Just wanted to say thanks for sharing this. I started with compound and shot it for years until discovering the beauty of simplicity in the form of the longbow. I then also got a traditional recurve... then 2 of them (1 ILF) Now I generally shoot trad/barebow recurve. A little bit like Goldilocks and the 3 bears really.... trying to find middle ground. I still find Olympic style a little bit on the more technical side (not to mention the stabilisers look a little unsightly imo) but bare-bow feels just perfect.
NUSensei I understand perfectly why you don't shoot compound, too complicated, but you should try the old compounds from the early 90's such as the Hoyt Pro Vantage series whose are like recurves, finger shooting, no peep sight, no fancy rest and sight, round simple cams, no need for a press to work on them, they are take down bows , a simple hex key to set them up and to take them down in seconds, they are in fact recurves with basic pulleys ..; Rambo didn't go wrong lol. I shoot both worlds and enjoy their simplicity. Have a great day (long time follower since war thunder)
I'm just getting into archery and my archery shops have like, 3 recurves in stock and a whole store full of compound bows because it's hunter focused. You explained my feelings on why I'm not interested in compound bows. If I wanted to spend all the time and money tinkering with attachments I'd get an AR
Exactly. I'm a senior who has been a woodworker for six decades. I started off buying tools and machinery, and I got a lot of jobs done. But I was a machinery operator, not a woodworker. Now I have a few basic high quality tools, take more time, and make adjustments in myself with my eyes , hands and feel. Tried a compound bow and soon felt like a machinery operator who relied on the technician to keep it running smooth. I'm not a tinkerer who enjoys keeping a machine tuned up. No more. Simple, feel, enjoy with less frustration and more confidence in my ability to adjust. If I want to harvest meat, I'll use a firearm. More humane and better chance of success. Just my opinion.
I could say the same thing you've just said in reverse, I never found traditional or re-curve bows to be appealing, I loved the complexity and shape of the compound, it does look intimidating at first but once you get used it you'll like it even more. BUT, I really don't know much about re-curve, maybe once I try one I will change my mind, for now, I'm dead serious about compound and every complex thing that comes with it!
I prefer recurve. I just feel more comfortable with it in hand. I wouldn't mind trying Compound to get a better feel for it, but traditional bows just seem more comfortable to me. I also have less to worry about mechanically with one and as an avid firearm shooter, less possible mechanical issues generally means better reliability. That said I do know recurves can have their issues too.
@@Bl4ckD0g I shoot compound and recurve(and rifle). But for me a prefer compound for hunting it just makes sense. It's about taking a ethical shot and making sure you decrease the chances of only injuring the animal or hitting the sewer pipes and ruining the meat.The ability to hold at full draw for longer(if it goes behind a bush or something) able to shoot longer distance and more accurately/consistently. Faster arrow speeds for the same draw weight, animals can sometime react to the noise of the bow and "jump the string". shorter overall length of the bow. Even the most skilled traditional bow hunters will/should not take a shot on an animal more then about 50yards because it just isn't consistent enough and not ethical. Where as a skilled compound hunter can take game at 75+ yards. In the end when it comes to hunting rifle or bow it's about what you are comfy with and as long as you know your personal max ethical shooting distance and know when not to take a shot you're golden.
Idk, I feel like the compound bow is almost a different weapon. Whilst it's superficially similar and operates similarly in practice, the mechanics of what is going on are kinda different. To me it's like asking a shotgun shooter why they don't shoot rifles.
It's still storing and releasing energy from the limbs, so to me it's less a different weapon and more a different discipline and take on the same weapon, less shotgun vs. rifle and more slug gun vs. rifle.
more like asking black powder muzzle loading rifle shooters why they don't use modern guns. The are mechanically different but one does the same job alot better. In regards to hunting anyway. Same as traditional bows and compound. One shoots faster and more accurately/consistently and is able to do it over a longer range. But that doesn't mean traditional bows/rifles don't have there place. In the end when it comes to hunting rifle or bow it's about what you are comfy with and as long as you know your personal max ethical shooting distance and know when not to take a shot you're golden.
@@BeetleBuns really depends on the slug gun and the rifle. some air rifles can shoot 150yards or more with very good group size but shooting a lever action 30/30 150yards would be pretty hard to get a dinner plate size group. On the other hand a old springger wouldn't compete with a new tikka .243. But your point is about different disciplines is still valid.
@@borbors ammo makes a difference today with the leverguns, a good scope and decent ammo makes for some amazing goups even at 300 yards with a levergun. Have you tried that LEVERevolution stuff that Hornady makes? It's absolutely insane the groups you can get!
Personally I love compound bows, built mine myself I can deliver 300fps speed with 40% let off, it's just fun to push the physics to higher degrees , but I also build my own long bows from time to time . Archery is a blast .
I agree with what you say about the different disciplines. Each to their own. I started at 17 in 1986 with target recurve then compound. For 17 years I was a coach and it was a 4 day/week thing. I was pretty good so I naturally progressed to compound for the new challenge and new things to play with. Soon after, the inner 10 zone was introduced and there was even more pressure on. At the end, I frankly got tired with being so robotic. I got stressed on the shooting line and the mental game took over. I yearned for a longbow as a new challenge, but I never got one and I gave it all up. 15 years later, last October, my daughter persuaded me to take it up again. She had no interest in target so I found a field archery club nearby. I was really nervous. I honestly thought I would never be able to hit a target without the use of sights or the other contraptions I was used to. Of course I missed. Just imagine how career-limiting that is in target shooting... But then I hit some, I missed some and I hit some more. Missing is normal and I found the attitude in traditional shooting is totally different. It's still about hitting the target, but less about perfection and robotics. Every single shot is taken from a different place, targets are all unknown distances; your stance changes to suit the terrain and obstacles. I don't worry about my form so much now; It's more about gauging distance and being intuitive. Above all, we have a laugh going around the course, even in winter, and it's physical exercise too. I can't describe the pleasure of hitting a target some 50 yards away with no assistance, or just missing it, or bouncing an arrow off a tree and it not being broken :) I am hooked again and I have a lot of fun. It's no longer about perfection, but the joy of shooting.
Excellent video. You seemed much happier and more relaxed than you have in your recent videos, its good to see. I started in compound, I'm a big Rambo fan, but it only lasted a for a few months. I wouldn't pick up a bow for almost a decade, this time around I went recurve and now I'm shooting a few times a week for over 2 years. I've pulled my compound out now that I have actually coaching, I shot my compound like a rifle previously never had proper instruction on form, and while I love the look of compounds I simple don't have fun shooting them. I enjoy the difficulty of shooting barebow, I use a modern bow but I like the challenge of I must be perfect and there is just something amazing about drawing back a recurve, I'm not sure I can explain it. This does not stop me from fiddling with every aspect of my bow and tuning my arrows to perfection, my archery friends tell me its good I don't shoot compound as I would never shoot I'd only tinker. I found, at least in my area, that the clubs, which are indoor its a long drive to the outdoor facilities, are target shooters and when you are constantly shooting with target shooters you compare yourself to target shooters and a barebow recurve shooter I have competed against compound shooters. This lead me to assembling a target bow because I wanted to compete, it gets boring winning by default or constantly beating the same casual archers who come out for a fun shoot but never practice, or on the other hand being slaughter by guys 3 times my age because they can shoot compound like scores with their barebows, they only show up for the events so learning from them is difficult. So I'd say I picked up Olympic recurve out of a desire to compete, and maybe a little bit because I get tired of those around me having such low expectations for my style. Above all others I love shooting my horse bows, when I just want to have fun, and fuck with people, I pull them out. I haven't learned the thumb draw yet but the possibilities are exiting. I agree and disagree with you on the compound issue, I agree shooting compound is far more stressful and I never want my archery to collapse into one bad shot, and by bad I mean a 9, to ruin an entire round. My compound friend must hit the X every time and will get frustrated when their fat shafts are not entirely within the X ring. I disagree with the notion that we as recurve and trad shooters don't strive for perfection in our bow, we tune and tweak our equipment as much as the compounders do, we just tune different aspects of our gear. I have spent hours tuning my brace height and tillers to create the most silent set up on my hunting recurve, I've spend hours tuning my arrows and fletching, my rest, my plunger, my sight and I can tell when I shoot without tuned gear and I know that if my gear is not tuned it amplifies any mistake I make. Most compounders I know don't do in-depth arrow tuning but will spend weeks tuning cams and rests and releases because they can compensate for those improperly tuned arrows with all the tech, while a finder release shooter can instantly tell in their shot placement when an arrow is not spined perfectly. And I completely agree Eastern horse bows are where the pure fun is. Yep you are very well known even my compound buddies watch you.
Compound archery is less about what score you shoot in practice, and more about not cracking under the pressure of competition. It's easy to shoot 10s in practice, it's tough to do that on stage.
Non archer here, but I'm curious. Why don't compound shooters just move the target farther away, so that a small variation in angle becomes a bigger variation in score? Alternatively, make targets smaller?
@@fi4re that's not an option in regulated matches, it's all fixed distance unless you shoot 3D. If you're just shooting for fun, yea, we do it all the time. Changing up the shot and just screwing around in general can help make you a better all-around archer.
@@BeetleBuns Thanks for the reply! Re regulated matches, rules can be changed. The NBA has changed basketball rules many times in order to shape the way they think the game should run (ie. for best viewership). Same with the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF), which has changed the ball size, rules for what constitutes a legal table tennis racket, etc. And Formula 1 changes the rules around what constitutes a legal Formula 1 race car year by year. I suppose then, your reply would be "there's no demand to change the rules in compound bow shooting. Compound shooters like the sport the way it is, and moving targets further away (in official rules) wouldn't attract more viewers or participants, so there's no financial incentive either."
@@fi4re yea, that's pretty much it. Compound shooters love watching their compound matches, and if anyone wants a truly exciting match, they watch barebow matches lol... I haven't really heard anyone clamoring for rule changes of that magnitude, for a little excitement we watch barebow or 3D, and for real excitement we watch NASCAR.
I got my first compound 5 years ago because I wanted to get into hunting. I always enjoyed shooting traditional recurve at summer camp and in the back yard. But I wasn't confident enough in my ability to shoot a recurve accurately. I do own 3 traditional style recurves and my local archery shop is making new strings for them. I want to practice with them more and one day I will be confident enough to hunting with them. I'm starting to get into local competition with IBO and 3D shoots. The competition helps me push myself to be a better archer. I've been in the mind set of hitting an 8 inch circle and placing an arrow in the vitals of a deer. But recently I've focused on hitting X's and I've seen a lot of improvement in the past month.
Using a recurve really forces you to learn archery. I think Compounds are primarily for hunting but also as target shooting to use it as a carry weapon. Like a gun or something. I love and have both. But if you want to get into archery i recommend starting with recurves
Why do I do my style of archery? When you asked this at the end of the video I thought that it would be easy to comment on it but I was at a loss of words. As I looked deep within for the answer I heard my inner self respond that I do my style of archery because it is my style of archery. And so it is.
Honestly? Watching this video, I felt like you were giving all my reasons and motivations for my style of shooting and choice of bow. I'm a traditional archer at heart, but the perfectionist in me is drawn to target recurve. Over 20 years I've shot both barebow and target, and will probably end up shooting barebow exclusively one day. Compound would bring out the absolutely worst in my perfectionist streak, and simply does not appeal.
I stopped shooting compound for the exact reason he discussed - Stress - As I got better I started expecting close to perfect scores - once I started getting to that point where I was counting down from a perfect score, it stopped being fun. Now I shoot trad recurve - if I hit everything with my first arrow I'm stoked - chuck in some 18s and 20s and I'm over the moon. Anyway, switching disciplines definitely helped me get my joy back. I still like to fiddle though, where it was once arrow rest and sight, I now muck around with tip weight, spine, arrow weight, etc.
Yeah man you said it ,,, I was given a really nice compound rig with a trigger and all ... I could group with it pretty good ,,, but it just didn't connect with me ... Now years later that I've gotten a traditional recurve and Longbow and then a more modern recurve making my own bow stringz that you help me out with big time ... I'm a more immersed in the tradition in the history of it ... I'm really loving it now ,,, thanks 👍👍👍 D ...
I love traditional modern recurve. My first bow was an old wooden longbow followed by a wooden recurve then a modern recurve. I also delved into compound bows. I LOVED the let-off and accuracy but hated the wheels and cables and sights. It was too much for me. I felt if I am going that route I may as well get a crossbow. :)
I have a 50lb compound and a 40lb recurve. I don't understand why people have such strong opinions on these matters, I love both of them and they are quite different. The recurve is without doubt more challenging and skill dependant, but if my life were under threat or if I was hunting? It is compound all day long, also all I have to do to tweak my compound is whip out my alan keys and spend 2 minutes adjusting draw length etc
I've found that 3D shooting with a Compound Bow is really enjoyable. I no longer hunt so it fills that gap for me anyways. Olympic Recurve is also something that I like shooting as well. I've got a decent size backyard so the days when I just want to step out my back door and release about 40 to 50 arrows is also a very fun experience. Great upload as always @NUSensei
Having a large area of land I get to enjoy multiple bow types in 1 day. I prefer compound for hunting and trad bow for its simple functionality. And some times I love to use my w&w toz with sf carbon limbs. It just boils down to what you enjoy.
I live on 40 acres myself in a stone cottage built in 1921. I absolutely love having the space to do whatever I want when it comes to my practice routines. The Sportsman Club I volunteer as an archery coach at is 120 seconds away too lol. 3 houses down essentially.
I've been doing archery for about a year now. Did my beginners course with a club bow, a take down Olympic recurve with a sight but no stabilisers. But in my heart I already knew I was going to go for an English longbow. Like you, I didn't want feel or start feeling that I was losing points, instead of gaining them. I'm already looking at other bow types (Tatar or Hungarian) and draw styles (thumb draw or maybe Slavic), but I'll try to ignore that itch for a while longer, as I've only recently started getting decent scores with the ELB.
Same here. I've been shooting instinctive barebow for the last few years because I simply find it more relaxing. When I first started archery it was with a compound bow because that's what they just handed me. After a little, the couch where I practiced noticed that I'd stopped using the sight to aim and suggested I might try instinctive shooting with a recurve. I enjoyed it so much I continued it for the next four years. Now I'm starting to feel more serious and bought a sight for my olympic recurve. Just watched all your videos on sights btw.
I’ve owned 3 compound bows and learned to shoot them well. I got into kisser buttons, string peeps, hydraulic stabilizers, and mechanical release aids. All that stuff took the fun out of archery for me. I got to expect too much because of all the gadgets, then there was the issues of things moving, coming out of adjustment, often playing with this and that to get back on target. I got hate it all so I bought a recurve, then I bought a nicer recurve. I finally found what I enjoyed in the bow and arrow. I doubt I’ll ever buy another compound, but I’m planning to buy another recurve this week.
I posted a comment yesterday. I started with a target bow but never wanted to have stabilizers or other special things on the bow. No I want to get a hunting recurve and exercise instinctive shooting. A longbow would also be fun.
Avoid compound at all costs!!! I was tempted by the lure of pinpoint accuracy and once I tried it, I was hooked. Like a crack addict! I avoided compound for a long time because of the expense. I could pick up a new long bow for the price of a decent release aid. But once you start down the compound rabbit hole, there’s no turning back. Oddly enough, compound shooting has improved my bare bow shooting exponentially Tinkering with the compound has taught me more about the mechanics of the bow and what’s important for accuracy than anything else so far. So, I shoot both. Love my bare bows. Am totally obsessed with compound. If you have an addictive personality or are prone to perfectionism, avoid compound archery at all costs! You’ve been warned.
Haha, I'm the same. For me, compounds are indeed like crack. I think it takes a certain kind of person to WANT to tinker and if you get a compound AND decide to do all the tuning yourself (some compound shooters I know can't even tie a d-loop, their bow tech does everything, which is fine) you WILL indeed, as you said, be going down a rabbit hole, one that I had NO idea was so deep, ha. But I really enjoy it. I spend half the time at my bow work bench and half shooting. Tuning is not always fun, but the drive to figure out "WHY are my shots off!!??" is pretty powerful. And all the components, sights, peeps, peep position, d-loop placement, d-loop pinch, serving size, pin housing adjustment, individual pin adjustment, sight windage/elevation, rest windage elevation, cam timing, cam lean, etc. All must be in sync. And that's assuming your form is correct! I shoot recurve too, actually my first bow, and still love it, but the maintenance is laughably non-existent compared to compound. Which can be nice, just all shooting no fixing. But to each their own.
blindjoedeath I caught that Dante's Inferno reference. It made me chuckle at first, but then made me ponder the realities of the lake of fire again-a somber yet necessary subject to think and act upon. Thanks for that :o)
BrianM Grim I’m sure if Dante and Virgil revisited Hell, they’d find another circle full of compound archers with bows that shoot one inch high right, no matter what adjustments they make. For all eternity.
I'm mostly getting into traditional bows. I find the craftsmanship with relatively simple technology, and natural materials astonishing the way bowyers select, and work a piece of wood into a weapon/art piece is incredible. That said I have no problem with shooting bows of all kinds. They are fun for different reasons.
I like simple, the less parts the better. I have enough issues with just me, I don't want to have to worry about tool or equipment failing. I have had a compound fail, its a scary event.. I have seen releases fail also, which caused a dry fire disassembly of a bow. Re-curves and long bows are safer to me.
You're right about that. I have a scar on my hand from a cable stop malfunction a cocked, "armed" compound. String was limp so no way to let down. No bow press nearby, basically a bomb. So while I'm not really scared of compounds, I do have a healthy respect for their potential to seriously injure someone. Ok, maybe I'm a little scared of them.
@Danny bass pro shop lol ya unfortunately thats the onlyvstore that sells archery anything mear me. Tried all the other sportingvgoods stores which are small and gun shops figuring i could maybe find targets at least but nope nothing that wouldnt shatter my arrows. Had to get my bow offling. Black hunter 45lb by manderin duck. Its beautiful and handles like a dream. I'll stick with a recurve. Though in your case youbcould always get a bow press and do it yourself.
@NuSensei Have you thought about trying vintage compound at all? For example, while I do own a modern compound produced within the last 4 years, I also own 2 vintage compound in order to explore a less accessory-oriented compound shooting experience. I practice with both an "Indian Stalker" and a "Browning Explorer I". Both have the capability of having a sight, but I am not running one on either. The Indian Stalker has a more modern arrow rest, but the Explorer I cant even support one and thus I'm using the tab-style rests that you would use on a recurve. Hands down though, the Indian Stalker has a great sense of "feel the shot" that I get from a recurve and is highly satisfying to shoot without feeling like you have to tinker with all the bells and whistles. No other compound ive tried can come close to that feel. The Explorer I is far less forgiving in regards to not using a sight but I still enjoy using it. I'd highly recommend trying the Indian Stalker and can be picked up cheap from $40-$60. I enjoy all types of archery and am not elitist in the slightest sense, being a volunteer Archery Coach myself for a Sportsman Club in Texas.
I started off, buying a Browning bow some 35 yrs. I pull 32 in and it stacked a lot of weight, but I enjoyed it. My other-- grabbed a compound bow [shopping] and I still have it. It just had a little plastic shelf for the arrow. I found it easier to shoot without sights. Less was more for me. Consistent challenging of myself - to learn - and enjoy. It became my Zen. Cheers
I used to cycle. I like tinkering around with my bicycle but it was also a burden. I switched from cycling to (recreational) kayaking. I liked that all I needed was a kayak, life vest and paddle. There was very little maintenance I had to do to my equipment and I liked that.
I'm a relative newcomer to archery (compound) since October 2019. I do have, in my past, quite a bit of experience in competitive rifle shooting (member of the Canadian DCRA national indoor postal match gold medallist team two years in a row), so I do understand something about breath control, peep sights, fine-tuning complex equipment, and just the necessary technicalities and complexities of high-level competitive shooting overall. I do receive coaching from a high level coach every couple of months. In archery, I'm still working a lot to fine-tune my baseine skills - how to achieve consistency in my draw and shot cycles, grip, anchoring, release, etc., and am still striving to tune my bow and my arrows. So as yet, I am not anywhere near the point where I can just easily shoot 10s, arrow after arrow, even at just 18 metres. While I do need to do a lot more tuning of my equipment, so much of the result at the target is nevertheless dependant on me, not my equipment, and therein lies a huge amount of personal challenge. All this to say that at this point in my own progression, I have some difficulty understanding how people seem to be inferring that compound is the quick and easy path to shooting 10s consistently. That goal is a long way off for me as yet. And I feel there is easily as much (and more) technique and long-term learning curve involved in compound archery as there ever was for me in competitive rifle shooting. None of this diminishes my high respect for recurve and particularly Olympic-style recurve, which I do think is the higher art over compound. But it seems to me there is as much technique and learning curve to surmount in order to get really good (i.e. elite-level) at compound competition as there is in recurve. I understand that inherently, it's much harder to shoot consistent 10s in Olympic recurve. But given that competition is within classifications, I really can't understand why people would feel there is any less of a need to strive for development as a compound archer compared with recurve.
Dude something is wrong if you can't hit consistent groups at 18m after so many months. I'm self taught and within the 1st week i tuned my bow and arrows and was very consistent at 10m, after 4 months i could average 8/10 10's at 40m after 1 year i'm shooting at 100m. Not saying you are bad or your coach is bad but maybe you or the coach has overlooked something in your gear or form. That being said i don't know how often you are shooting how well you retain knew information etc. How is your shooting at the moment?
@@borbors I didn't say I couldn't hit consistent groups. I said I couldn't consistently hit 10s. And yes, I do need to tune aspects of my bow, and start fresh with a new, tuned set of target arrows (spine, fletching, etc.), and move to using a resistance release aid. Glad you're getting consistent groups after a week without any coaching and shooting 100m distance after a year. You must be a natural-born archer. There's just no other explanation. Kinda sucks the fun out of the challenge of a lifetime sport, though, yah?
@@ianhamilton4816 sorry for the misunderstanding. I just kept adding a new aspect to challenge myself can't get bored of it as long as i can make it harder. I mainly hunt now days so i still have fun, hunting also can change alot just by the terrain/location or target animal so it's always fun. Good luck bud.
With my traditional I can more easily see and understand the steps and elements of my own improvement. Plus, I favour simplicity, I guess. It's also a matter of personal aesthetic.
I can totally appreciate what you're saying in this video. I shoot bare 'primitive' recurve and horse bows, and make my own arrows. I like the simplicity and self sufficiency of the equipment, and the challenge of shooting accurately with the least amount of help from any devices.
Everyone can learn and teach a subject....but you have a knack for clear precise explanations....putting it in layman's terms.....thank you for another great video I really enjoy them 🍻👍
It’s very simple and clear explanation of archer mentality and personality issues. I started archery just three month back using both compound and modern recurve bows. The three month were enough to get the interesting bow style looking to share competition a day. Recurve Olympic bow is my favorite that I can feel every shoot starting from the first process step of the shoot to the score I got at the end. Recurve or compand bow it’s your choice but be sure to enjoy the archery.
I honestly find shooting the Recurve more rewarding and fun than the compound. I have to work hard to be good with the traditional bows. I can pull my recurve out and shoot easy groups with it vs recurve with no sights. My compound is really old though, so it is a lot nicer to shoot and less fussy than these newer cam styles.
There's a certain simplistic joy to shooting traditional barebow. I shoot instinctive and just focus on hitting the target. The minute I put a sight on the bow, suddenly I feel a pressure to perform better. It's still fun, and I enjoy the challenge, but barebow is what I do to relax. I do expect to eventually get a compound bow and learn to shoot it, probably with an eye toward hunting. I originally got into archery because I was fascinated by it's history, so the bulk of my collection is, and probably always will be, historical replicas.
I practice traditional (Korean horn bow) and occasionally recurve. At first, I was into it because I was interested in my Korean background. Nowadays, I do it for recreation, stress relief, and meditation. Compound archery, while interesting and impressive, seems too cumbersome to me due to the maintenance and tinkering. I intend on getting other traditional bows, particularly a Manchu bow.
Ok so to answer the suggestion here's some of my background; I've tried compound before. When I did, it would just BUCK in my hand and throw off my shot, I didn't do well with it at all. I have to be able to feel everything in order to put an arrow where I want it. So with my Hungarian style horsebow, for example, mostly using the Slavic or thumb draw, I have to push against the belly of the bow and feel the tension in the limbs and string to comprehend the pressure/energy/power that's gonna carry the arrow---whereas the pullies on a compound would virtually erase that ability to tell and sights would complicate things for me (not to mention if I got to used to 'em they'd become crutches). Plus, as a storyteller describing characters using traditional methods, hands-on research has to be with a similar bow so I stick to either that horsebow or longbow.
My choice was easy. I have a connective tissue disorder, my joints separate and dislocated very easily and makes me use a lot more energy than most people. With compound archery I can use a wrist release to keep my fingers from dislocation, and the let-off gives me relief when I'm at full draw so I can keep shooting before tuckering out. Even with a 35 lb draw weight and 80% let-off, I sometimes struggle to have enough strength to stay at full draw after 30 shots.
I got into archery at about age 16. It was mainly because my uncle handed me an old 1953 Bearcat glass powered recurve (hybrid really) bow. I shot that for several years until I had to put it down for other things in life. I recently picked it back up and have added a Super Grizzly to my collection. The main focus of archery for me is hunting, since archery does open up more months of the year as well as land to hunting opportunities over firearms. However, getting involved in a club and online groups is becoming appealing as long as it is friendly and not the typical trad vs compound debate. I never moved to anything other than trad archery due to its simplicity, at least relative to compound bows. I don’t need a bow press, sync cams, set a fixed draw weight, Allen wrenches, stabilizers, and a myriad of other accessories to shot a trad bow. If I am out hunting and my string looks frayed or breaks, I reach in my pocket to pull out the spare and in the 20 minutes needed to put on beaver tail silencers, set brace height, and string, I am up and hunting again. Nothing against compound, it just isn’t for me at least for now.
:) just spent the afternoon tinkering with my compound and came across this video... made me smile when I realized I have more fun with my recurve. Thanks Buddy for the videos!
Started with olympic recurve in a beginners course just before the virus outbreak so really looking forward to getting back into it. At some point I will learn barebow but not until learning one isn't going to interfere with learning the other, main reason I would like to learn barebow is to learn to use a Mongolian horse bow.
I don't like compounds because they're too complicated. It just look as like a whole load if stuff that can go wrong. I prefer the simplicity of a recurve.
I appreciate both. I started as a kid before compound bows were invented. I favor the aesthetic beauty of the older wooden recurves. Now as an a old man, I shoot compound bows because they are easier physically for me with their let off. They are more complex but once they are tuned, its not like you have to constantly fuss over it, at least not at my level of shooting. I like to alternate back and forth with my compounds between one that is fully set up and the other without a sight.
Little late to the party, but it is too good of a discussion board to pass up. I got my start in archery shooting recurves off the back porch with my family. It was a fun, relaxing, and wholesome way for us to bond at the end of the day. I loved the simplicity and pure skill it took to land a difficult shot from a variety of changing distances and scenarios. Once I got bigger, I was introduced to bowhunting. Naturally my next bow was a compound. I enjoyed the heft and gadgetry of the compound, and the ability to land more difficult shots with ease. However, once archery became a way to put meat on the table, I slowly forgot the joy that came with a bare recurve. The skill required to land a shot, the quieter sound, and the smoothness of draw and release became things of the past, replaced with an ever growing obsession with speed and broadhead selection. Those days of a relaxing family shoot with steaks on the grill are over. But it is a tradition I cannot wait to introduce to my family when the time is right.
Still a beginner (shooting on and off for a few years now). I like going back and forth between my recurve and compound. I like the challenge of the recurve, but also the rewarding aspect of the compound in terms of tighter groups. Sometimes I’m too hard on myself on my recurve performance and just want to get tighter groups. I have experience with rifle shooting which I find comparable to compound. With a compound, I feel one can focus more on form, breathing, and target alignment. Not that a recurve doesn’t do the same, but the added pressure of time at full draw skewing the shot changes things significantly. Compounds let you take more time with things since the bow relieves weight at full draw, allowing one to adjust and hold position longer and get your shot right. Though on days that I do shoot well with my recurve, tighter groups feel more satisfying. I also have a slingbow (Gearhead T15 Pro) which changes things a bit more. Overall, I like archery as a whole: past, present, and future. There’s something for all the different needs one might have and I want to at the very least try them all.
Compound shooting is like shooting a rifle, with a telescopic sight, been there done that, I got back into Archery using Asiatic bows, reactive shooting, simple, organic, thinking of the bow more as a weapon than as precision sports equipment, not even being tied to one bow, mastering the skill, rather than one bow or shooting aspect.
Every kind of competitive action brings with it a dose of pressure and anxiety. Which is probably why you find "traditional" archery more relaxing. At least that's how it is with me. Which is why I prefer asiatic, barebow archery over all. Archery is about the only thing I find relaxing nowadays. When done for myself, my own soul. Like playing guitar. Competition can be a lot of fun, but too much of it is not healthy. As with all things in life I guess.
I been practicing archery for over 3yrs now, started using a 20lb Samick Sage from my instructor and over time as well as hitting the gym, I bulked up my arms and last year I bought my first compound bow: The APA Mamba with a 65lb draw and I love it. As for preference, I just like a fast projectile going down range. Same logic with my bb/pellet guns, now in a survival scenario, the recurve makes a lot more sense because they're easier to maintain. That's a case of practicality over preference, took my nieces out for an archery shoot for the first time last night and they loved it so they'll have a spring/summer hobby with Uncle real soon :)
I personally don't like compound because it's something where you are expected to hit the bulls-eye as much as possible. I feel like when I'm shooting compound it's less skill more just going through the motions.
I'm instinctive fingers shooting vintage compound on both hands. It fits nowhere, no competition, no comparision. Maybe only it fits to Rambo movies xd I think it means I like also the traditional way and siplicity but at the same time I like the short length of compound bows, let off and Rambo ofc. But don't like the look of modern compounds. i try traditional archery as well.
Gotta love that archery has so many variations,. Have a 20lb fibreglass kids bow,. 60lb compound (15 years old) been getting back, just bought a hunting recurve (compound style riser). In 50lb,. Next will be and olympic style recurve, traditional bare bow recurve, and a horse bow,( I'm a little interested in thumb draw). So many different variations to learn about. For me it's like 10 games in 1.
I really enjoy your clips in general and acknowledge the articulate manner in which you get your ideas across...you are a professional educator after all. It is interesting...and frustrating, that you would find yourself having to justify why you do what you do...isn't it the simplest thing in the world......you've tried all types and you know what suits you. I will make an analogy comparing different archery styles to different types of cars....a "Stick and string" Long-Bow can be compared to say a 1930's style of car...manual gearbox, leaf-sprung suspension, little of no sound-deadening...any performance is totally up to the driver's skill. A modern take-down recurve ( or long-bow ) and even a fancier "Bare-bow" set-up is perhaps like a 1990's car...with the benefits of modern materials, modern suspension and brakes and even automatic transmission...pretty-much anyone can get solid performance with a moderate amount of practice and nerve. Now, a modern compound is still "Shooting"...you still have to hold, draw, aim and release ( sort-of )...but what you're shooting is more akin to a Formula 1 car...requiring an engineering and mechanical team and extremely high tolerances, in terms of expectations. So, you try and then pick the "Car" or "Bow" that best suits your personality...even if that means MULTIPLE different types. I played competitive Baseball as a teen-ager and learnt that I had to spend many, many hours to train both my brain and body to achieve a very unique skill ( ranging and then throwing a ball fast and accurately to various distances )...it took a lot of work, but then I really appreciated the growth. It's the same with Golf, with Surfing even. Other people are less about the process and more fixated on the end result, regardless of how they got there...that's their right. Watching so many people on UA-cam throws light on the fact that different people are able to achieve similar things, via TOTALLY DIFFERENT PATHS. Look at say Jeff Kavanaugh and the groups that he can get...rapid fire, from 50m...with a factory-made Bear Trad. bow. Similar ( or better ) to the groups that sometimes win U.S Championships with highly refined gear, ranges and wind-indicators etc etc. But then he's been doing it for well over 40 yrs and Lord only knows how many shots he's fired...in one clip, he talked about his old Bear Grizzly exploding...but he estimated he'd shot perhaps 200,000 arrows through it!! So, experiment...or not, and find out about yourself. Somedays you'll want Pizza, others you'll want BBQ...just as long as none of us ever presume to tell anyone else what tastes, or drives or shoots the best.
I feel the same. No one would call a Roman Ballista a bow and arrow, although it does shoot large arrows. The same, I feel, goes for the compound bow. It does what a ballista does. I consider it a mobile catpult. if you want to hunt or shoot with all the bells and whistles, just because it enables the "manly man" to shoot bows way to heavy and sights to pinpoint a hit, you might as well wait and use a damn gun. If you like compounds, more power to you, as for me nothing doing!!
TheDave570 dude get real, it’s not even close to that polarized. This is pure ignorance in your comment. Yes the arrow leaves the bow in 1 second. Past that your playing with ballistics same as a normal bow. Just have a bit more push. Most can’t even shoot 45 pound compound draw so it’s not what you think. Think of it this way, improved efficiency. Do you think compound hate generator video guy shoots wooden limbs? No probably the high tier carbon fiber foam core limbs a grand each. Hes shooting a drastically improved bow compared to a normal bow.
@@1014p You don't seem to know the concept of what a Ballista is, so with all that BS you just spewed, you play with your manly-man toys as you wish. BTW, I am not ignorant. No more replies to you, sir
TheDave570 reply or not, a ballista is a large cross bow. If you really knew anything you would know the shoot form is near identical for traditional and compound. This is supporting the bow in the draw, stability, and all the micro muscles needed to hold the shot. The only advantage compounds provide is let off which at most is 60% and honestly makes it harder to hold. The other is high efficiency in limb energy to the arrow. Both of these executed wrong in the shot will affect the shot badly. Lot more forgiveness in traditional shooting.
Comparing a compound bow to a ballista is a bit ridiculous... Sure they both use mechanical advantages to be more "powerful" etc, but one requires a damn weapons platform to be used... Maybe if we were talking about crossbows, since the similarities between the 2 are greater but even then. It's like saying "Oh you use an M14? Pfft, might as well just use a Vickers. I'll stick with my M40 thanks" Just because they are mechanically different, doesn't mean it's not a rifle. A compound bow has mechanical differences, but the fundamentals are the same.
I have not even started with archery yet, more a gun target shooter, I am just doing my pre-start study :) And one of my basic question as an amateur, who only seen the archery in TV was, how should I decide what to shoot. I didn't understand what's the difference, if there is some evolution and the compound is the latest step, or those two worlds exists side by side and which one is better. So thank you very much for all your videos, seen several of them in last 3 days and learned a lot. I was already leaning to the recurve, the modern "olympic" version, with all those weights, sights and modern shape and materials, but your argument and reasons convinced me completely now. What I am looking for in archery is actually achieving the perfection like with the compound, but with recurve there is much wider span of seeing the progress. As you mentioned, in compound after getting some base skills, it is just about keeping those tens and you never know, if you are just lucky or improving that much, while with recurve, I guess I will be lucky to start with some 7s and move up to the 9-10s in some time. Which might be even longer, then I am willing to admit :) But it will definitely show me my progress in finer steps, then with the compound. I am super competitive person, so the only reason I will do it is to be the best, but at the same time, shooting whatever is fun and with bow it also has this traditional class.
I grew up shooting recurve and sort of always had a bias because of that. I used to view a compound as less personal with every shot and less involved as far as skill. But I’ve come to respect and shoot all aspects of archery and bought my first compound a few months ago for bowfishing. No complaints.
Grew up being taught barebow/recurve and I love it but having progressed into target shooting with rifles, I found that compounds give me a closer experience to that. Getting back into archery after a long hiatus, my first choice was a compound due to the speedy learning curve. It's also offers better conditions for hunting due to compact form factor and let off. But for quick fun, the barebow is always nearby.
I own a firearms company and have always been into weapons but last year picked up a new PSE Xpression and now I’m gravitating towards the peace and quiet of 3D. Plus after the initial investment it’s way cheaper too!
My interest in archery began in the late 80s. Actually during my military service. I contacted the local archery club to learn how to shoot a bow and got a recurve bow for target shooting. Because that's what was done in the club. Quite shortly after this, the compound bow became a fad, inspired by the Rambo movies. When I started archery I didn't even know there was such a thing as a compound bow. Suddenly all kinds of wilderness stores started selling compound bows. These were often not familiar with archery. Neither the customers who thought it was cool to shoot a Rambo-bow. The compound bow became mythic, and some believed ordinary bows are toys and compound that's a real weapon... I'm glad I didn't jump on a trend but became genuinely interested. Now I want to start shooting bow again, but this time it will be a hunting curve and I go for instinctive shooting. I realize that's what I really wanted from the beginning. Chromed details, stabilizers and laser sight, release: no, it feels like a machine rather than a bow! However, it is still not impossible that in the future I will get a compound bow as well. One thing does not necessarily need to exclude the other. But it will hardly be a strict target recurve again.
Years ago I found myself getting a bit bored shooting my 50 lb wooden recurve. Trying to give myself a boost, I decided to go up in pull weight and it was hard but I got 'bow stronger' thanks in part to lifting moderate weights, as in weight lifting. For me, shooting a compound isn't enjoyable when the compound eases off on the pull. I simply love recurves and the physical pleasure of the pull and the focuse on form. Yes, I still own a compound but almost never shoot it.
I started out on a compound bow, mainly because I live in an area where hunting is a way of life so a compound bow is a way to go because you need the precsion and the ability to leverage the let off to line up your shot while hunting. I shot that for 10 years and sort of lost interest in archery for a while because it became boring. Then I started shooting a traditional recurve bow and it renewed my interest because I had a new set of challenges. Then a near by park installed some 3D targets and found a new reason to break out my compound bow for more than just hunting. I have now found a couple of local clubs where I can do 3D archery tournaments. I watched survival Lilly do one and thought that would be fun. I now have a renewed interest in archery, I got a recurve bow, a long bow hybrid, and of course my compound bow. I also got into fletching my own arrows for my traditional archery equipment, which provided even more ways to enjoys(or despise) archery. I don't think I'll be fletching arrows for my compound bow because just about any sporting goods store sells quality carbon arrows that are factory fletched and all I have to do is cut the shafts to length and install the inserts. Sometimes I get lucky and find shafts that are the right length that I can buy off the shelf as is, but those are few and far between. I'm actually excited for this weekend and I will be attending my first 3D archery shoot. I will be taking my compound bow, but I hope to be proficient enough with traditional archery to be able to tke my recurve or long bow to a shoot, hopfully either late this year or sometime next year.
Years ago after I had graduated High School, I asked for a recurve bow for Christmas. What inspired me was most likely the Robin Hood series on Netflix, I think. I went to Bass Pro with my parents and personally picked out the bow that I wanted, which was a PSE Mustang recurve takedown bow at 60" length and 45 lb draw weight. I had gotten a few other things with the bow such as a whisker biscuit, bow stringer for safer stringing and unstringing, a back quiver, the arm guard, leather draw finger guard glove (probably not the right term), and carbon arrows. It was nice being able to test out the bow in their indoor range before purchasing it and committing. I was excited! I looked up a local archery range, which was free to use but offered lessons if I wanted them for a fee. There I went! Flying down the road in my car, unsure yet excited about finally bringing my dream to life! Once I got to the archery range, I immediately saw other archers there, but 90% of the time the archers were compound shooters. I watched a group of compound archers hovering over their bows with tools, adjusting and tweaking their bows. I may recall one of them admitting that it could take about 15 minutes of tuning their bow before even shooting. That sounded and looked ridiculous to me! Here I am with a simple recurve bow where all I had to do was string it and I'm ready to go. I might have gained some kind of dislike for compound archers, because all this that I saw and heard just didn't sound like what a traditional bow should be, with wheels, gadgets, sights, trigger release, and just the sight of it being primarily metal! I would feel stressed sometimes as well with me being out numbered by all these "fake archers". At the time that's how I felt. There's still a grain of that in my feelings toward compound shooters. Anyway, I did eventually ask one of the elder archers WHY they shot with compound bows. Their responses were something along the lines of "I have back issues and can't handle the pull of a recurve". This made sense to me and I respected them, specifically, more. Every now and then, yes, another recurve shooter would show up, but just like me they felt outnumbered. Back to me finally shooting for the first time. I did receive some general guidance from another recurve shooter where he had me shoot through paper to see how my arrows flew and such. He then advised me to start with closer targets. So, here I am standing on the firing line, knocking my bow, drawing back the string, aiming, and letting loose. Mind you, I had the whisker biscuit on. I began to hate that thing as it slowed down knocking my arrows and I felt like it caused some resistance to my arrows flying through it, slowing it down. I went full barebow at this point, screwing that unsightly piece of crap off my bow, and just using the smooth polished curved arrow rest. This.. this was it. This is what real archery felt like it should be. It felt amazing to shoot this way, a free and unburdened feeling. Tapping into my instincts, which is what I shoot. Instinctive. Like NUSensei, I enjoyed the challenge with the simplicity of the bow and the power of the bow in my body. When I did hit the target, I was happy wherever it hit. If it hit close to the bullseye that just made me extra happy. I feel as though if I had been a compound shooter myself, I would have been more stressed by the tinkering and distracting gadgets and probably would have given up archery. Last bit of note, I always thought "might as well get a gun" whenever I saw a compound bow.
A few years ago, my son went paint balling. Next door was a archery range. I was able to hire a bow and shoot for an hour for peanuts compared to what my son was throwing away next door. There were 3 of us there that day, a longbow man, a compound guy ( who incidentally started work at my office the following week), and me on a recurve. I enjoyed it tremendously, but didn’t get a chance to try the compound. I managed to get my wife to an archery lesson and she loved it, where after one lesson she was ok with wanting to buy a bow, and do it again. Our instructor, was a world champion 3D bow hunter. So we ordered our compounds this week. I think the form matters less, the enjoyment and development matters more. Esp. Starting some thing new later in life. Keeping a fresh and open mind.
I shoot compound, but not that way you told. Only the CU category is that, what you said. But yes, that the category when all of the technology is used in a compound bow. I always loved the technology behind compound bows, but I didn't like, that the aiming is bit like, shooting a gun. When I started with Compound, I used hunter equitments, but after some years I changed to Compound Barebow: basicly I took off my hunter signs, the peep-signs and the d-loop. That's why both tradicional and modern shooters look me "that I'm nothing in archery": tradicion archers - because I shoot modern bow; modern archers - because I don't use the opportunities what a compound bow gave me. That is for me both fun to shoot and challange. But for fun I have a tradicional horsebow too (I'm planning to buy a hunter recurve too).
My start to archery was interesting. The first bow I shot was a 90# yew bow when I was 7. I was hooked after seeing the arrow fly in the general direction of the target ( even though it landed about 12feet in front of me) that I just had to get a bow. Since my dad's response was that archery is an expensive hobby and there was no where to shoot, I saw it fit to make my own bow out of a branch from an avocado tree that had fallen down after a recent storm. It was awesome having my own bow, but my sister ruined it for me twice. The first time she carved it up thinking you needed to take the bark off to make it a real bow, and the second time I shot her in the back... I wasn't able to pick up archery again until I moved out of the house. Oddly enough I was still allowed to practice marksmanship.
Tinkering with my bow is specifically why i switched to compound. I used to shoot olympic and i found it awesome, i still adore it. I shot traditional too and i loved the nock and shoot style and the freedom of it but tinkering with my bow was my deal breaker for my style as well as the portability and the lack of need to take the strings off. I love all styles but i found the one i'm comfortable using.
"using modern Olympic archery equipment you don't count what you earn you count what you lose"...superb and well put (quite enough of an argument why to go for traditional bows)
Solid points. And I completely understand what you're saying, especially that part about something like 8 being stressful result for compound shooters. When you think about it like that, it does seem like it's taken way too seriously, but it is what it is. Preferences, and like your attitude seems to be, nothing bad in diversity :) I shot recurve about 15 years ago and I enjoyed it so much. There were these compound shooters at the range then and at that time, I felt like it wasn't "real" archery any longer and more like shooting with a gun (yes, totally different, but with all those sights and releases it was easier to compare that to gun shooting than recurve... and I've always shot with guns too). Our recurves had only basic stuff: arrow rest and nock-ring (if that's correct in english) on the string. No stabilizers or sights at front, because those we considered to be highly non-traditional bow shooting items. It was then... Now, after couple of years, I started again. This time I went full compound. Why? Because I wanted a bow that could be efficiently used for hunting as well. My compound shooting isn't so much as range-shooting, or aiming at competition (tho gotta admit... the thought does have it's charm, because I'm highly competitive person). I shoot because I want to see those arrows fly and hit the target, preferably around the "kill zone", since if I'm ever going to use my bow for hunting, I gotta be damn sure it's a clean shot and the animal will not suffer. But that's another topic... I like the tinkering part. Not only for bows, but everything. I'm just that guy who likes to tinker with all kinds of mechanical gadgets :P Even in my other hobby, airsoft, I spend hours and hours fine tuning my airsoft guns, building and taking them apart while testing different bits and pieces to make them shoot as well as possible. Heck, most of my airsoft hobby is tinkering with the guns and less actually playing the games, which is pretty stupid... anyway... To me, recurve now seems like it's much too basic to be interesting. Not saying recurve is bad, it's just not for me currently. If you're into archery, any kind of archery, then that's completely fine. Tho I do see this foolish gap sometimes between compound and recurve shooters... mostly recurve... like they're watching down on other. Like the bow you're using is something less. It's mostly recurve shooters who have this mind set about their bow being "the one and only". Well, people sometimes turn into elitists if they're not intelligent enough to see it's all good how other people like their hobby. Me? I'm completely fine shooting at the practise with recurve shooters, with my hunting bow. It's not even "proper" target bow, so I'm somewhere below target compound guys to some recurve shooters :'P But always glad to see someone who's into archery and doesn't feel superior to someone else who's not sharing that absolutely same mindset. That diversity is what makes this hobby so great and everyone should embrace it. Who knows, perhaps one of those recurve shooters will want to try out compound and absolutely loves it, or vice versa. Keep an open mind :) Oh and good video!
I like the feel of the recurve bow when everything lines up and you do a good shot. I still enjoy having my arrows really grouped as that only needs some tinkering with the sight afterwards. I tried compound in the club as other members want to share their joy of course but wasn't my style. It is something you just know after shooting it a couple of arrows and go back to what you enjoy. To each their joy and keep shooting.
I'm totally new to archery, and I shoot compound, or at least I'm learning to shoot compound. Reason being I want to shoot accurately as soon as possible. But my coach asked me to start with recurve, just to make sure I know how archery actually works. And now I'm in a bit of dilemma. I enjoy the process of archery, which means I actually enjoy recurve more, but at the same time, I still want to be accurate soon. That's why I bought a compound bow and looking forward to buying a recurve bow someday in the near future.
NUEensel ,,,, I concur, I am 67. I have 11 bows, one homebuilt carved bow 64 inches, four high brand compounds, four high brand recurves , two high brand long bows. I owned many other bows from pre-school age, but early age were all homemade. I have been an archer all those years but off and on as time, place, life permitted. I have been in competition with Mr. Perfection many times, that being myself. I have found through out life the Joy of anything is more important than the success of doing it expertly. I am in constant perpetual motion of experimenting and modifying out side the mainstream of archery. Even some things I developed have been years before I saw them in modern bows. I came to find that competition, beyond that of friendly endeavors, makes the joy of shooting vanish into a haze of self despair. I often mix multiple techniques from all of archery. But it is the joy I seek since I do not need for creating food. This is why I avoid those statements to enter into the professional world of archery. I enjoy watching those competitions for much the same reasons, joy of the game. ,,,, Thank you for all your videos.
My opinion is depends on the purpose... If you go hunting or outdoor, go for compound, if target archery indoor from 20 yards, go for recurve, if just fun and relax go for trad bow. I shoot all three started with recurve, then trad and compound. I don't really agree with NuSensei regarding the tweaks and buying gadgets for bows, as I shoot recurve first and always bought and tried something new... Many many options and tweaks for recurve as well, like setting up pressure button, stabilizers, playing with arrow spines, arrow tips, trying different limbs, sights, risers etc. And then, if you go 10 yards back, you can start to play again! Never ending story with recurve too... Also could be very expensive, if you want a competition setup like proper riser and limbs. And the setup makes a big difference with recurve, not just depends on the archer's skills... It also can be frustrating if something wrong with your setup and you don't have the consistency what you expect. And after spent lot of money for proper recurve setup, you're still nowhere compare to a compond bow in terms of accuracy and FPS and consistency. For the half of the money you can buy a compound package and shoot better then with a high end recurve setup... If you want to challange yourself with compound and not just shoot 10s indoor, then go further like 50 yards and outdoor and have the same fun with recurve from 20 yards!
I just love shooting barebow. The simplicity of the tool really just adds to the enjoyment for me. I find it to be more of a symmetry between myself and the bow without all the balancers, stabilisers and compound doesn't appeal to me because of that reason. This allow me to become a better archer instead of relying on other added on tools.
It's funny how you bring up tinkering with a compound like you'd tinker with a bike or a car, and honestly as a mechanically minded person who loves tinkering, that's a huge part of why I love compound bows, I love making all those small adjustments for myself and others, making an adjustment and getting it right is so satisfying. I lean towards compound, but I also shoot traditional, and when I broke my nose (incidentally tinkering with a compound bow in a press), I shot traditional for a month, which when I got back into compound, I actually shot the second best score I ever have on a 3 spot, so I think very much both trad and compound shooters can learn a lot from each other, I really don't think there should be the divide there is and it'd be very beneficial for both sports for more trad shooters to pick up a compound and for compound shooters to pick up a trad.
I am in the same camp. While the compound bow is a precision machine it's also a rather difficult to service one. I went for a single piece recurve for the simplicity of maintenance. String it, check brace height, wax the string, check for mechanical issues. That's it. No timing adjustment, no sight adjustment. Just me, the bow, arrow and the target. If I miss (or shoot crap like I usually do) it's all on me.
Lubos Soltes I haven’t really ever had to check cam balance, quality of string does matter.
@ in a grid down scenario which considering the state of the country lately it's quite possible what happens if your compound breaks are you capable of fixing it yourself? I mean I can carve a bow literally by finding the right tree and using my knife it's not anything special but it'll get the job done or you can always make one out of PVC which I'm sure they'll still be plenty of that hanging around. But when something goes wrong how difficult is it to actually repair or do you have to take it somewhere?
@@davidbeaulieu4815 Like I said, I've only had to have serious repairs done once, in the past 40-odd years I've had it, and I bought it used in a yard sale. I'd say its about as "bulletproof" as can be. And if something catastrophic happens to my compound, I can probably hack out a rough bow, or find another somewhere.
@ can confirm only ever had 1 limb crack and that's because it was bouncing around in the back of the truck with some tools while we were off road(forgot to put it back in the case), other then that never needed to cam stuff or anything. Its all simple stuff but alot of people seem to complicate things.
@ agreed.
Being traditionally minded, I find compound bows to not be particularly aesthetically appealing, they indeed look like some kind of complex machinery. No offence to compound users, you do your thing.
Compound shooter here; I must agree with you about it.
I personally really like the aesthetics of some compound bows, but I see them as a totally different tool than a recurve bow. Compound bow looks more like guns, which I also like the aesthetics. Recurve bows usually look more like traditional bows, and I also like that.
😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
There's a guy at the range who uses a compound that is all chromed out. I call it The Terminator Bow.
@@WastedTalent- Probably wouldn't do that to my bow, but that's awesome.
"Especially as an Asian, you have to maintain very high standards" lol
not an asian here, I'm a middle school kid right now and since I've been getting good grades for a long time, they held high standards for me, just don't know when my parents are actually going to accept the fact that I can't and will not be maintaining A's all the time when everyone has expectations and you don't live up to them it hurts..
@bowdog I realize that but a month ago it was so annoying....
@@renatugaming5730 you need to taste bitterness
funny cause when i started scrolling through the comments i heard him saw this as i read this comment at the same time
Of course, otherwise you'll be a Bsian.
I am an engineer by profession and the simplicity of traditonal or barebow recurve appeals to me as I do enough tingkering on my job and I just want to shoot some targets.
I shoot both and its really not that complicated all i had to do is get my arrow rest in the right position and (took less the 5 shots to get it right and another 5 or so to get the sight lined up) has been shooting straight for 8 yrs now. Even when i changed to carbon arrows it still shot the same( besides drop) and when i upped my broad heads to 150gr, it is a cheap compound bow aswell bow as well.
I like tinkering I can not deny that one ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Same here!
Engineers are the worst
I shoot a Hungarian, a recurve and a compound but my favorite is compound. Your explanation is very much spot on and understandable. This is what makes archery such a fine sport. Thank you.
I think a compound bow is about two steps away from a crossbow, which might as well be a gun. Recurve bows, on the other hand, are more simple. I find it incredibly pleasing to know that I could take what amounts to a stick and some hair, and fling a sharper stick 50 yards away into a target, perfectly. I wouldn't feel the same about a gun, or a crossbow, or a compound. I would say it roughly goes...
knife throwing -> axe throwing -> slinging -> barebow -> recurve -> recurve with sight -> compound bow -> crossbow -> gun -> explosive
...in order of "most satisfaction with hitting the target."
I started out using a compound. Then one day I saw a women at an indoor range and she was destroying a bulls eye at ten yards with a plain one piece bow, so I talked to her and the next time I went to that indoor range I rented a recurve and fell in love the first time I hit the bulls eye which was probably fifty shots in. I found that even though it was harder it was much more satisfying and challenging. The compound was more like shooting a rifle but the free style was more like learning to throw a ball. I sold my compound, bought a recurve and twenty years later I haven't looked back.
Interesting story! While I like technical development and improvements I think that it can go to far. A compound with all technical features does hardly feel like a bow but a machine.
Had the bow set up at a pro shop. It performed just fine ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxQEKUoxLWwayEDZR0NKB-5limn4MBU-2L . And I would say this is a good starting now that I could pass down to my son when he is older.But the package was missing the release and a nock was missing from one arrow.Dealing with customer support was terrible. They suggested I buy a new release rather than correct their own quality control issue because it’s to expensive for the. to ship it out from China.Update: manufacturer got back to me and resolved the issue. I retract the above statement.
I like re-curve. I enjoy the ritual of the stringing so that I can feel the bow through my whole body. I like the feel of the power building in the draw. I like the awareness that my whole body is engaged with the aim. I like how I must project to the target and make it part of me.
For me, archery is a method of joining with the world. Most machines don't help with that.
Yessssir
@@Sardonic_sardine 🤣 oh yeah..
This. Right. Here! I didn't know how to explain it, but you did it for me.
Hi I am a newbie to archery at the age 75. What you're saying is just the way I am thinking. We are fortunate to have enough ground around the house to do archery I'm so glad I found your videos. Thanks for putting them up.🇬🇧👍🙋♀️
Yeah, I'm in the "stick and string" old school archery camp, but I'm not the kind of gatekeeper purist that says that anything else isn't "real" archery. Framing it in a context of real or not real seems like a pointless debate. Although making a distinction between historical and modern archery isn't without merit. If folks want to shoot compound, great for them. I just don't want anything to do with it.
It's kind of like electric and acoustic guitar. They're both real instruments and just because one has been around for much longer, saying that the newer type isn't a "real" guitar would just be silly.
Agree entirely!
It was compound that initially attracted me to archery. I am fascinated by the man/machine interaction interaction of archery, the physics of arrow flight and the way the different materials work together. And I'm a gear freak - and compound sure does tick that box (sorry wallet).
I also shoot Olympic recurve, but not competitively. I find it meditative and obviously much more difficult than compound - but it trains and helps me maintain form which has improved my compound scores more than anything. Even more than my latest three hundred dollar release just added to the collection...
I admire all archers and respect all forms of our sport, but nothing sounds better than arrows slapping together in the x ring at 70 metres, and at my age I realistically will never achieve that with a recurve in my lifetime.
I am genuinely surprised and entertained by hate that compound shooters get from others... It reminds me of the Melbourne/Sydney 'rivalry' - you only hear about it in Melbourne ;)
Yours is the best archery channel on the 'tube, keep up the good work!
@@dislikebutton1935 IMHO, I think it amounts to equipment snobbery on the part of "traditional" archers. You here the same sort of thing in gun circles. "You don't 'need' that type of gun! Only bad guys have that! All you really need is ( fill in the blank with their preferred gun)." If we don't stand together, no matter what type of bow, gun, or whatever, those who aren't interested, or downright hostile towards us will pick us off one by one, until eventually you can't have or do anything "they" find disagreeable!
You hit the nail on the head.
Yes
To me, a compound bow is basically an alternative crossbow. While neat, asking someone why they don't shoot compound bows, would be like asking someone why they don't shoot a crossbow. And to me, I think the answer lies in not wanting to shoot a "mechanical device," that is something that looks more like a mechanistic contraption. Not that crossbows and compound bows aren't cool in their own way, but I think the appeal to those who prefer a more primitive bow, is wanting to be kind of getting back to nature, and simpler times, and away from the hustle and bustle of modern life, and returning to simplicity.
A good comparison might be people who like to go car camping, vs. people who like to go backpacking. For some, the appeal is getting away from the mechanical things.
I agree. The physical process and muscle development is not the same with compounds. I like the look of traditional bows more. If need be, a person can build a traditional bow and feed their family, versus when your compound breaks you're 'dead in the water' so to speak due to a vast majority of compound shooters don't know how to work on/repair their own equipment, let alone having those parts available. With traditional bows, you earn your 8, 9, 10, and X. Compounds are easier to draw and hold (with let-off), aim and shoot, so the 10 and X is more 'expected'. So to ME, it feels like cheating or taking a shortcut. You don't standout from having to earn the 10's and X's, like a traditional or recurve.
EDIT
There's a barebow recurve shooter (with a 36#) at my indoor range who consistently goes against 15+ compound shooters at the Friday night shootouts, and 95% of the time he whips them and takes home the money.....and the compound shooters can't stand it. He always shoots 295+ at 20yds. He EARNED that skill set. His gear wasn't dialed in so he can hit that score in a week or 2 of shooting, like a compound.
I have watched a number of your videos and I must say that I appreciate the education that you impart (the Sensei side), the inclusive nature that you bring (I think to the Survival Lilly video), and the instructional side (back to the sensei again) - you are extremely balanced and measured in the things that you say - again - much appreciated. I'm only a recreational shooter that always shot compound but have recently discovered that traditional aspect and am running one of the Toth horse bows at this point. I find it challenging from an instinctive and gap shooting aspect as well as relaxing....nothing like going to the back yard and sending a hundred or more arrows down range.
One of my favourite episodes of yours. I really like your philosophy.
Archery is like martial arts. "same thing" but many different styles. Everybody can find the right one.
You helped me understand why I enjoy traditional bow shooting over compound bows. It's the simplicity of it. Sure, you can get more accuracy, more distance, with less skill in less time with a compound. It's more rewarding to attempt to get similar results with a simple long bow or recurve along with the personal training it takes to use use them.
That's why I'm still stuck on my English Longbow :)
I learned on a (simple) olympic recurve, but with a sight it wasn't challenging me enough. I'll never get a very high score, but seeing people's frustration sometimes, I'm just happy missing the target half the time and having fun!
Just wanted to say thanks for sharing this.
I started with compound and shot it for years until discovering the beauty of simplicity in the form of the longbow. I then also got a traditional recurve... then 2 of them (1 ILF)
Now I generally shoot trad/barebow recurve. A little bit like Goldilocks and the 3 bears really.... trying to find middle ground.
I still find Olympic style a little bit on the more technical side (not to mention the stabilisers look a little unsightly imo) but bare-bow feels just perfect.
NUSensei I understand perfectly why you don't shoot compound, too complicated, but you should try the old compounds from the early 90's such as the Hoyt Pro Vantage series whose are like recurves, finger shooting, no peep sight, no fancy rest and sight, round simple cams, no need for a press to work on them, they are take down bows , a simple hex key to set them up and to take them down in seconds, they are in fact recurves with basic pulleys ..; Rambo didn't go wrong lol. I shoot both worlds and enjoy their simplicity. Have a great day (long time follower since war thunder)
I'm just getting into archery and my archery shops have like, 3 recurves in stock and a whole store full of compound bows because it's hunter focused. You explained my feelings on why I'm not interested in compound bows. If I wanted to spend all the time and money tinkering with attachments I'd get an AR
Exactly. I'm a senior who has been a woodworker for six decades. I started off buying tools and machinery, and I got a lot of jobs done. But I was a machinery operator, not a woodworker. Now I have a few basic high quality tools, take more time, and make adjustments in myself with my eyes , hands and feel. Tried a compound bow and soon felt like a machinery operator who relied on the technician to keep it running smooth. I'm not a tinkerer who enjoys keeping a machine tuned up. No more. Simple, feel, enjoy with less frustration and more confidence in my ability to adjust. If I want to harvest meat, I'll use a firearm. More humane and better chance of success. Just my opinion.
I could say the same thing you've just said in reverse, I never found traditional or re-curve bows to be appealing, I loved the complexity and shape of the compound, it does look intimidating at first but once you get used it you'll like it even more. BUT, I really don't know much about re-curve, maybe once I try one I will change my mind, for now, I'm dead serious about compound and every complex thing that comes with it!
You can always get a recurve or borrow one and try it see how you like it it's not like it's hard to find one to practice with
Honestly compound is just the best😂👌
I prefer recurve. I just feel more comfortable with it in hand. I wouldn't mind trying Compound to get a better feel for it, but traditional bows just seem more comfortable to me. I also have less to worry about mechanically with one and as an avid firearm shooter, less possible mechanical issues generally means better reliability. That said I do know recurves can have their issues too.
Until you shoot traditional you don't know how bad of an archer you ( a person ) really is!
@@Bl4ckD0g I shoot compound and recurve(and rifle). But for me a prefer compound for hunting it just makes sense. It's about taking a ethical shot and making sure you decrease the chances of only injuring the animal or hitting the sewer pipes and ruining the meat.The ability to hold at full draw for longer(if it goes behind a bush or something) able to shoot longer distance and more accurately/consistently. Faster arrow speeds for the same draw weight, animals can sometime react to the noise of the bow and "jump the string". shorter overall length of the bow.
Even the most skilled traditional bow hunters will/should not take a shot on an animal more then about 50yards because it just isn't consistent enough and not ethical. Where as a skilled compound hunter can take game at 75+ yards.
In the end when it comes to hunting rifle or bow it's about what you are comfy with and as long as you know your personal max ethical shooting distance and know when not to take a shot you're golden.
Idk, I feel like the compound bow is almost a different weapon. Whilst it's superficially similar and operates similarly in practice, the mechanics of what is going on are kinda different. To me it's like asking a shotgun shooter why they don't shoot rifles.
Person Oisels well said!
It's still storing and releasing energy from the limbs, so to me it's less a different weapon and more a different discipline and take on the same weapon, less shotgun vs. rifle and more slug gun vs. rifle.
more like asking black powder muzzle loading rifle shooters why they don't use modern guns. The are mechanically different but one does the same job alot better. In regards to hunting anyway. Same as traditional bows and compound. One shoots faster and more accurately/consistently and is able to do it over a longer range. But that doesn't mean traditional bows/rifles don't have there place. In the end when it comes to hunting rifle or bow it's about what you are comfy with and as long as you know your personal max ethical shooting distance and know when not to take a shot you're golden.
@@BeetleBuns really depends on the slug gun and the rifle. some air rifles can shoot 150yards or more with very good group size but shooting a lever action 30/30 150yards would be pretty hard to get a dinner plate size group. On the other hand a old springger wouldn't compete with a new tikka .243. But your point is about different disciplines is still valid.
@@borbors ammo makes a difference today with the leverguns, a good scope and decent ammo makes for some amazing goups even at 300 yards with a levergun. Have you tried that LEVERevolution stuff that Hornady makes? It's absolutely insane the groups you can get!
Personally I love compound bows, built mine myself I can deliver 300fps speed with 40% let off, it's just fun to push the physics to higher degrees , but I also build my own long bows from time to time . Archery is a blast .
User pic checks out.
I agree with what you say about the different disciplines. Each to their own. I started at 17 in 1986 with target recurve then compound. For 17 years I was a coach and it was a 4 day/week thing. I was pretty good so I naturally progressed to compound for the new challenge and new things to play with. Soon after, the inner 10 zone was introduced and there was even more pressure on. At the end, I frankly got tired with being so robotic. I got stressed on the shooting line and the mental game took over. I yearned for a longbow as a new challenge, but I never got one and I gave it all up.
15 years later, last October, my daughter persuaded me to take it up again. She had no interest in target so I found a field archery club nearby. I was really nervous. I honestly thought I would never be able to hit a target without the use of sights or the other contraptions I was used to. Of course I missed. Just imagine how career-limiting that is in target shooting... But then I hit some, I missed some and I hit some more. Missing is normal and I found the attitude in traditional shooting is totally different. It's still about hitting the target, but less about perfection and robotics. Every single shot is taken from a different place, targets are all unknown distances; your stance changes to suit the terrain and obstacles. I don't worry about my form so much now; It's more about gauging distance and being intuitive.
Above all, we have a laugh going around the course, even in winter, and it's physical exercise too. I can't describe the pleasure of hitting a target some 50 yards away with no assistance, or just missing it, or bouncing an arrow off a tree and it not being broken :) I am hooked again and I have a lot of fun. It's no longer about perfection, but the joy of shooting.
Excellent video.
You seemed much happier and more relaxed than you have in your recent videos, its good to see.
I started in compound, I'm a big Rambo fan, but it only lasted a for a few months. I wouldn't pick up a bow for almost a decade, this time around I went recurve and now I'm shooting a few times a week for over 2 years.
I've pulled my compound out now that I have actually coaching, I shot my compound like a rifle previously never had proper instruction on form, and while I love the look of compounds I simple don't have fun shooting them. I enjoy the difficulty of shooting barebow, I use a modern bow but I like the challenge of I must be perfect and there is just something amazing about drawing back a recurve, I'm not sure I can explain it. This does not stop me from fiddling with every aspect of my bow and tuning my arrows to perfection, my archery friends tell me its good I don't shoot compound as I would never shoot I'd only tinker.
I found, at least in my area, that the clubs, which are indoor its a long drive to the outdoor facilities, are target shooters and when you are constantly shooting with target shooters you compare yourself to target shooters and a barebow recurve shooter I have competed against compound shooters. This lead me to assembling a target bow because I wanted to compete, it gets boring winning by default or constantly beating the same casual archers who come out for a fun shoot but never practice, or on the other hand being slaughter by guys 3 times my age because they can shoot compound like scores with their barebows, they only show up for the events so learning from them is difficult. So I'd say I picked up Olympic recurve out of a desire to compete, and maybe a little bit because I get tired of those around me having such low expectations for my style.
Above all others I love shooting my horse bows, when I just want to have fun, and fuck with people, I pull them out. I haven't learned the thumb draw yet but the possibilities are exiting.
I agree and disagree with you on the compound issue, I agree shooting compound is far more stressful and I never want my archery to collapse into one bad shot, and by bad I mean a 9, to ruin an entire round. My compound friend must hit the X every time and will get frustrated when their fat shafts are not entirely within the X ring. I disagree with the notion that we as recurve and trad shooters don't strive for perfection in our bow, we tune and tweak our equipment as much as the compounders do, we just tune different aspects of our gear. I have spent hours tuning my brace height and tillers to create the most silent set up on my hunting recurve, I've spend hours tuning my arrows and fletching, my rest, my plunger, my sight and I can tell when I shoot without tuned gear and I know that if my gear is not tuned it amplifies any mistake I make. Most compounders I know don't do in-depth arrow tuning but will spend weeks tuning cams and rests and releases because they can compensate for those improperly tuned arrows with all the tech, while a finder release shooter can instantly tell in their shot placement when an arrow is not spined perfectly.
And I completely agree Eastern horse bows are where the pure fun is.
Yep you are very well known even my compound buddies watch you.
The compound archers at my club have nowhere to go. Their rounds are 10,10,10,10,10, etc. Just tedious.
Compound archery is less about what score you shoot in practice, and more about not cracking under the pressure of competition. It's easy to shoot 10s in practice, it's tough to do that on stage.
Non archer here, but I'm curious. Why don't compound shooters just move the target farther away, so that a small variation in angle becomes a bigger variation in score? Alternatively, make targets smaller?
@@fi4re that's not an option in regulated matches, it's all fixed distance unless you shoot 3D. If you're just shooting for fun, yea, we do it all the time. Changing up the shot and just screwing around in general can help make you a better all-around archer.
@@BeetleBuns Thanks for the reply!
Re regulated matches, rules can be changed. The NBA has changed basketball rules many times in order to shape the way they think the game should run (ie. for best viewership). Same with the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF), which has changed the ball size, rules for what constitutes a legal table tennis racket, etc. And Formula 1 changes the rules around what constitutes a legal Formula 1 race car year by year.
I suppose then, your reply would be "there's no demand to change the rules in compound bow shooting. Compound shooters like the sport the way it is, and moving targets further away (in official rules) wouldn't attract more viewers or participants, so there's no financial incentive either."
@@fi4re yea, that's pretty much it. Compound shooters love watching their compound matches, and if anyone wants a truly exciting match, they watch barebow matches lol... I haven't really heard anyone clamoring for rule changes of that magnitude, for a little excitement we watch barebow or 3D, and for real excitement we watch NASCAR.
I got my first compound 5 years ago because I wanted to get into hunting. I always enjoyed shooting traditional recurve at summer camp and in the back yard. But I wasn't confident enough in my ability to shoot a recurve accurately. I do own 3 traditional style recurves and my local archery shop is making new strings for them. I want to practice with them more and one day I will be confident enough to hunting with them. I'm starting to get into local competition with IBO and 3D shoots. The competition helps me push myself to be a better archer. I've been in the mind set of hitting an 8 inch circle and placing an arrow in the vitals of a deer. But recently I've focused on hitting X's and I've seen a lot of improvement in the past month.
Using a recurve really forces you to learn archery. I think Compounds are primarily for hunting but also as target shooting to use it as a carry weapon. Like a gun or something. I love and have both. But if you want to get into archery i recommend starting with recurves
Why do I do my style of archery? When you asked this at the end of the video I thought that it would be easy to comment on it but I was at a loss of words. As I looked deep within for the answer I heard my inner self respond that I do my style of archery because it is my style of archery. And so it is.
Honestly? Watching this video, I felt like you were giving all my reasons and motivations for my style of shooting and choice of bow. I'm a traditional archer at heart, but the perfectionist in me is drawn to target recurve. Over 20 years I've shot both barebow and target, and will probably end up shooting barebow exclusively one day. Compound would bring out the absolutely worst in my perfectionist streak, and simply does not appeal.
Using a compound bow is like getting a teacher and all the resource in order to get a good grades.
Why
But yeah you still have to put in the work to get those grades right? XD
@@fendroca Yeah, but it would be a lot easier.
I stopped shooting compound for the exact reason he discussed - Stress - As I got better I started expecting close to perfect scores - once I started getting to that point where I was counting down from a perfect score, it stopped being fun. Now I shoot trad recurve - if I hit everything with my first arrow I'm stoked - chuck in some 18s and 20s and I'm over the moon. Anyway, switching disciplines definitely helped me get my joy back. I still like to fiddle though, where it was once arrow rest and sight, I now muck around with tip weight, spine, arrow weight, etc.
Excellent vid! Good in depth answers with details. Keep it up NuSensei!
Yeah man you said it ,,, I was given a really nice compound rig with a trigger and all ... I could group with it pretty good ,,, but it just didn't connect with me ... Now years later that I've gotten a traditional recurve and Longbow and then a more modern recurve making my own bow stringz that you help me out with big time ... I'm a more immersed in the tradition in the history of it ... I'm really loving it now ,,, thanks 👍👍👍 D ...
I love traditional modern recurve. My first bow was an old wooden longbow followed by a wooden recurve then a modern recurve. I also delved into compound bows. I LOVED the let-off and accuracy but hated the wheels and cables and sights. It was too much for me. I felt if I am going that route I may as well get a crossbow. :)
I have a 50lb compound and a 40lb recurve. I don't understand why people have such strong opinions on these matters, I love both of them and they are quite different. The recurve is without doubt more challenging and skill dependant, but if my life were under threat or if I was hunting? It is compound all day long, also all I have to do to tweak my compound is whip out my alan keys and spend 2 minutes adjusting draw length etc
I've found that 3D shooting with a Compound Bow is really enjoyable. I no longer hunt so it fills that gap for me anyways. Olympic Recurve is also something that I like shooting as well. I've got a decent size backyard so the days when I just want to step out my back door and release about 40 to 50 arrows is also a very fun experience.
Great upload as always @NUSensei
Oh yeah it seems like most of us are just shooting at targets. Guess if you wanna take down game a compound is the better tool
Having a large area of land I get to enjoy multiple bow types in 1 day. I prefer compound for hunting and trad bow for its simple functionality. And some times I love to use my w&w toz with sf carbon limbs.
It just boils down to what you enjoy.
I live on 40 acres myself in a stone cottage built in 1921. I absolutely love having the space to do whatever I want when it comes to my practice routines. The Sportsman Club I volunteer as an archery coach at is 120 seconds away too lol. 3 houses down essentially.
I've been doing archery for about a year now. Did my beginners course with a club bow, a take down Olympic recurve with a sight but no stabilisers. But in my heart I already knew I was going to go for an English longbow. Like you, I didn't want feel or start feeling that I was losing points, instead of gaining them. I'm already looking at other bow types (Tatar or Hungarian) and draw styles (thumb draw or maybe Slavic), but I'll try to ignore that itch for a while longer, as I've only recently started getting decent scores with the ELB.
Same here. I've been shooting instinctive barebow for the last few years because I simply find it more relaxing. When I first started archery it was with a compound bow because that's what they just handed me. After a little, the couch where I practiced noticed that I'd stopped using the sight to aim and suggested I might try instinctive shooting with a recurve. I enjoyed it so much I continued it for the next four years. Now I'm starting to feel more serious and bought a sight for my olympic recurve. Just watched all your videos on sights btw.
I’ve owned 3 compound bows and learned to shoot them well. I got into kisser buttons, string peeps, hydraulic stabilizers, and mechanical release aids. All that stuff took the fun out of archery for me. I got to expect too much because of all the gadgets, then there was the issues of things moving, coming out of adjustment, often playing with this and that to get back on target. I got hate it all so I bought a recurve, then I bought a nicer recurve. I finally found what I enjoyed in the bow and arrow. I doubt I’ll ever buy another compound, but I’m planning to buy another recurve this week.
I posted a comment yesterday. I started with a target bow but never wanted to have stabilizers or other special things on the bow.
No I want to get a hunting recurve and exercise instinctive shooting. A longbow would also be fun.
@@patricj951 I just bought a Bear Montana Longbow
Avoid compound at all costs!!! I was tempted by the lure of pinpoint accuracy and once I tried it, I was hooked. Like a crack addict!
I avoided compound for a long time because of the expense. I could pick up a new long bow for the price of a decent release aid. But once you start down the compound rabbit hole, there’s no turning back.
Oddly enough, compound shooting has improved my bare bow shooting exponentially Tinkering with the compound has taught me more about the mechanics of the bow and what’s important for accuracy than anything else so far.
So, I shoot both. Love my bare bows. Am totally obsessed with compound. If you have an addictive personality or are prone to perfectionism, avoid compound archery at all costs! You’ve been warned.
Haha, I'm the same. For me, compounds are indeed like crack. I think it takes a certain kind of person to WANT to tinker and if you get a compound AND decide to do all the tuning yourself (some compound shooters I know can't even tie a d-loop, their bow tech does everything, which is fine) you WILL indeed, as you said, be going down a rabbit hole, one that I had NO idea was so deep, ha. But I really enjoy it. I spend half the time at my bow work bench and half shooting.
Tuning is not always fun, but the drive to figure out "WHY are my shots off!!??" is pretty powerful. And all the components, sights, peeps, peep position, d-loop placement, d-loop pinch, serving size, pin housing adjustment, individual pin adjustment, sight windage/elevation, rest windage elevation, cam timing, cam lean, etc. All must be in sync. And that's assuming your form is correct!
I shoot recurve too, actually my first bow, and still love it, but the maintenance is laughably non-existent compared to compound. Which can be nice, just all shooting no fixing.
But to each their own.
Papa Bear Yes! The compound rabbit hole is deep, and it’s real!! Abandon all hope ye who enter here.
blindjoedeath I caught that Dante's Inferno reference. It made me chuckle at first, but then made me ponder the realities of the lake of fire again-a somber yet necessary subject to think and act upon. Thanks for that :o)
BrianM Grim I’m sure if Dante and Virgil revisited Hell, they’d find another circle full of compound archers with bows that shoot one inch high right, no matter what adjustments they make. For all eternity.
I have a $500 bow that came with release aid, string stop, hex keys, wrist sling, quiver and arrows. Hasn’t failed me yet.
I'm mostly getting into traditional bows. I find the craftsmanship with relatively simple technology, and natural materials astonishing the way bowyers select, and work a piece of wood into a weapon/art piece is incredible. That said I have no problem with shooting bows of all kinds. They are fun for different reasons.
I enjoy both. I use a compound for hunting but recurve for target.
I like simple, the less parts the better. I have enough issues with just me, I don't want to have to worry about tool or equipment failing. I have had a compound fail, its a scary event.. I have seen releases fail also, which caused a dry fire disassembly of a bow. Re-curves and long bows are safer to me.
You're right about that. I have a scar on my hand from a cable stop malfunction a cocked, "armed" compound. String was limp so no way to let down. No bow press nearby, basically a bomb. So while I'm not really scared of compounds, I do have a healthy respect for their potential to seriously injure someone. Ok, maybe I'm a little scared of them.
@@KevinHenleytheone mental note never getting a compound bow
@Danny bass pro shop lol ya unfortunately thats the onlyvstore that sells archery anything mear me. Tried all the other sportingvgoods stores which are small and gun shops figuring i could maybe find targets at least but nope nothing that wouldnt shatter my arrows. Had to get my bow offling. Black hunter 45lb by manderin duck. Its beautiful and handles like a dream. I'll stick with a recurve. Though in your case youbcould always get a bow press and do it yourself.
@NuSensei Have you thought about trying vintage compound at all? For example, while I do own a modern compound produced within the last 4 years, I also own 2 vintage compound in order to explore a less accessory-oriented compound shooting experience. I practice with both an "Indian Stalker" and a "Browning Explorer I". Both have the capability of having a sight, but I am not running one on either. The Indian Stalker has a more modern arrow rest, but the Explorer I cant even support one and thus I'm using the tab-style rests that you would use on a recurve.
Hands down though, the Indian Stalker has a great sense of "feel the shot" that I get from a recurve and is highly satisfying to shoot without feeling like you have to tinker with all the bells and whistles. No other compound ive tried can come close to that feel. The Explorer I is far less forgiving in regards to not using a sight but I still enjoy using it. I'd highly recommend trying the Indian Stalker and can be picked up cheap from $40-$60.
I enjoy all types of archery and am not elitist in the slightest sense, being a volunteer Archery Coach myself for a Sportsman Club in Texas.
I love shooting compound. I love the mechanical look and complexity of the bows
Nothing like nailing a target with a recurve, you feel ownership of that shot....
I started off, buying a Browning bow some 35 yrs. I pull 32 in and it stacked a lot of weight, but I enjoyed it. My other-- grabbed a compound bow [shopping] and I still have it. It just had a little plastic shelf for the arrow. I found it easier to shoot without sights. Less was more for me. Consistent challenging of myself - to learn - and enjoy. It became my Zen. Cheers
I used to cycle. I like tinkering around with my bicycle but it was also a burden. I switched from cycling to (recreational) kayaking. I liked that all I needed was a kayak, life vest and paddle. There was very little maintenance I had to do to my equipment and I liked that.
I'm a relative newcomer to archery (compound) since October 2019. I do have, in my past, quite a bit of experience in competitive rifle shooting (member of the Canadian DCRA national indoor postal match gold medallist team two years in a row), so I do understand something about breath control, peep sights, fine-tuning complex equipment, and just the necessary technicalities and complexities of high-level competitive shooting overall. I do receive coaching from a high level coach every couple of months. In archery, I'm still working a lot to fine-tune my baseine skills - how to achieve consistency in my draw and shot cycles, grip, anchoring, release, etc., and am still striving to tune my bow and my arrows. So as yet, I am not anywhere near the point where I can just easily shoot 10s, arrow after arrow, even at just 18 metres. While I do need to do a lot more tuning of my equipment, so much of the result at the target is nevertheless dependant on me, not my equipment, and therein lies a huge amount of personal challenge. All this to say that at this point in my own progression, I have some difficulty understanding how people seem to be inferring that compound is the quick and easy path to shooting 10s consistently. That goal is a long way off for me as yet. And I feel there is easily as much (and more) technique and long-term learning curve involved in compound archery as there ever was for me in competitive rifle shooting. None of this diminishes my high respect for recurve and particularly Olympic-style recurve, which I do think is the higher art over compound. But it seems to me there is as much technique and learning curve to surmount in order to get really good (i.e. elite-level) at compound competition as there is in recurve. I understand that inherently, it's much harder to shoot consistent 10s in Olympic recurve. But given that competition is within classifications, I really can't understand why people would feel there is any less of a need to strive for development as a compound archer compared with recurve.
Dude something is wrong if you can't hit consistent groups at 18m after so many months. I'm self taught and within the 1st week i tuned my bow and arrows and was very consistent at 10m, after 4 months i could average 8/10 10's at 40m after 1 year i'm shooting at 100m. Not saying you are bad or your coach is bad but maybe you or the coach has overlooked something in your gear or form. That being said i don't know how often you are shooting how well you retain knew information etc. How is your shooting at the moment?
@@borbors I didn't say I couldn't hit consistent groups. I said I couldn't consistently hit 10s. And yes, I do need to tune aspects of my bow, and start fresh with a new, tuned set of target arrows (spine, fletching, etc.), and move to using a resistance release aid. Glad you're getting consistent groups after a week without any coaching and shooting 100m distance after a year. You must be a natural-born archer. There's just no other explanation. Kinda sucks the fun out of the challenge of a lifetime sport, though, yah?
@@ianhamilton4816 sorry for the misunderstanding. I just kept adding a new aspect to challenge myself can't get bored of it as long as i can make it harder. I mainly hunt now days so i still have fun, hunting also can change alot just by the terrain/location or target animal so it's always fun. Good luck bud.
With my traditional I can more easily see and understand the steps and elements of my own improvement. Plus, I favour simplicity, I guess. It's also a matter of personal aesthetic.
which is the main reason why all beginners should start with bare bow.
I can totally appreciate what you're saying in this video. I shoot bare 'primitive' recurve and horse bows, and make my own arrows. I like the simplicity and self sufficiency of the equipment, and the challenge of shooting accurately with the least amount of help from any devices.
Everyone can learn and teach a subject....but you have a knack for clear precise explanations....putting it in layman's terms.....thank you for another great video I really enjoy them 🍻👍
It’s very simple and clear explanation of archer mentality and personality issues.
I started archery just three month back using both compound and modern recurve bows.
The three month were enough to get the interesting bow style looking to share competition a day.
Recurve Olympic bow is my favorite that I can feel every shoot starting from the first process step of the shoot to the score I got at the end.
Recurve or compand bow it’s your choice but be sure to enjoy the archery.
I think compound is def modern day archery. Still archery. One exception I have to say in crossbows. Since there pretty much guns with string.
I honestly find shooting the Recurve more rewarding and fun than the compound.
I have to work hard to be good with the traditional bows. I can pull my recurve out and shoot easy groups with it vs recurve with no sights.
My compound is really old though, so it is a lot nicer to shoot and less fussy than these newer cam styles.
I use compound because it's easier to hunt with (personally at least)
There's a certain simplistic joy to shooting traditional barebow. I shoot instinctive and just focus on hitting the target. The minute I put a sight on the bow, suddenly I feel a pressure to perform better. It's still fun, and I enjoy the challenge, but barebow is what I do to relax. I do expect to eventually get a compound bow and learn to shoot it, probably with an eye toward hunting. I originally got into archery because I was fascinated by it's history, so the bulk of my collection is, and probably always will be, historical replicas.
I practice traditional (Korean horn bow) and occasionally recurve. At first, I was into it because I was interested in my Korean background. Nowadays, I do it for recreation, stress relief, and meditation. Compound archery, while interesting and impressive, seems too cumbersome to me due to the maintenance and tinkering. I intend on getting other traditional bows, particularly a Manchu bow.
Ok so to answer the suggestion here's some of my background; I've tried compound before. When I did, it would just BUCK in my hand and throw off my shot, I didn't do well with it at all. I have to be able to feel everything in order to put an arrow where I want it. So with my Hungarian style horsebow, for example, mostly using the Slavic or thumb draw, I have to push against the belly of the bow and feel the tension in the limbs and string to comprehend the pressure/energy/power that's gonna carry the arrow---whereas the pullies on a compound would virtually erase that ability to tell and sights would complicate things for me (not to mention if I got to used to 'em they'd become crutches). Plus, as a storyteller describing characters using traditional methods, hands-on research has to be with a similar bow so I stick to either that horsebow or longbow.
My choice was easy. I have a connective tissue disorder, my joints separate and dislocated very easily and makes me use a lot more energy than most people. With compound archery I can use a wrist release to keep my fingers from dislocation, and the let-off gives me relief when I'm at full draw so I can keep shooting before tuckering out. Even with a 35 lb draw weight and 80% let-off, I sometimes struggle to have enough strength to stay at full draw after 30 shots.
I got into archery at about age 16. It was mainly because my uncle handed me an old 1953 Bearcat glass powered recurve (hybrid really) bow. I shot that for several years until I had to put it down for other things in life. I recently picked it back up and have added a Super Grizzly to my collection.
The main focus of archery for me is hunting, since archery does open up more months of the year as well as land to hunting opportunities over firearms. However, getting involved in a club and online groups is becoming appealing as long as it is friendly and not the typical trad vs compound debate.
I never moved to anything other than trad archery due to its simplicity, at least relative to compound bows. I don’t need a bow press, sync cams, set a fixed draw weight, Allen wrenches, stabilizers, and a myriad of other accessories to shot a trad bow. If I am out hunting and my string looks frayed or breaks, I reach in my pocket to pull out the spare and in the 20 minutes needed to put on beaver tail silencers, set brace height, and string, I am up and hunting again.
Nothing against compound, it just isn’t for me at least for now.
:) just spent the afternoon tinkering with my compound and came across this video... made me smile when I realized I have more fun with my recurve. Thanks Buddy for the videos!
Started with olympic recurve in a beginners course just before the virus outbreak so really looking forward to getting back into it. At some point I will learn barebow but not until learning one isn't going to interfere with learning the other, main reason I would like to learn barebow is to learn to use a Mongolian horse bow.
“‘..It’s the balance of both worlds...”
Yes indeed !!!
Agree 100%
I shoot olympic recurve and more recently an American flat bow. I love both styles for exactly the same reasons you mentioned.
I don't like compounds because they're too complicated. It just look as like a whole load if stuff that can go wrong. I prefer the simplicity of a recurve.
I appreciate both. I started as a kid before compound bows were invented. I favor the aesthetic beauty of the older wooden recurves. Now as an a old man, I shoot compound bows because they are easier physically for me with their let off. They are more complex but once they are tuned, its not like you have to constantly fuss over it, at least not at my level of shooting. I like to alternate back and forth with my compounds between one that is fully set up and the other without a sight.
Little late to the party, but it is too good of a discussion board to pass up. I got my start in archery shooting recurves off the back porch with my family. It was a fun, relaxing, and wholesome way for us to bond at the end of the day. I loved the simplicity and pure skill it took to land a difficult shot from a variety of changing distances and scenarios. Once I got bigger, I was introduced to bowhunting. Naturally my next bow was a compound. I enjoyed the heft and gadgetry of the compound, and the ability to land more difficult shots with ease. However, once archery became a way to put meat on the table, I slowly forgot the joy that came with a bare recurve. The skill required to land a shot, the quieter sound, and the smoothness of draw and release became things of the past, replaced with an ever growing obsession with speed and broadhead selection. Those days of a relaxing family shoot with steaks on the grill are over. But it is a tradition I cannot wait to introduce to my family when the time is right.
Still a beginner (shooting on and off for a few years now). I like going back and forth between my recurve and compound. I like the challenge of the recurve, but also the rewarding aspect of the compound in terms of tighter groups.
Sometimes I’m too hard on myself on my recurve performance and just want to get tighter groups. I have experience with rifle shooting which I find comparable to compound.
With a compound, I feel one can focus more on form, breathing, and target alignment. Not that a recurve doesn’t do the same, but the added pressure of time at full draw skewing the shot changes things significantly. Compounds let you take more time with things since the bow relieves weight at full draw, allowing one to adjust and hold position longer and get your shot right.
Though on days that I do shoot well with my recurve, tighter groups feel more satisfying.
I also have a slingbow (Gearhead T15 Pro) which changes things a bit more. Overall, I like archery as a whole: past, present, and future. There’s something for all the different needs one might have and I want to at the very least try them all.
Compound shooting is like shooting a rifle, with a telescopic sight, been there done that, I got back into Archery using Asiatic bows, reactive shooting, simple, organic, thinking of the bow more as a weapon than as precision sports equipment, not even being tied to one bow, mastering the skill, rather than one bow or shooting aspect.
The thing is at the point where you’d use compound why not use a crossbow or even a gun?
Every kind of competitive action brings with it a dose of pressure and anxiety. Which is probably why you find "traditional" archery more relaxing. At least that's how it is with me. Which is why I prefer asiatic, barebow archery over all. Archery is about the only thing I find relaxing nowadays. When done for myself, my own soul. Like playing guitar. Competition can be a lot of fun, but too much of it is not healthy. As with all things in life I guess.
I been practicing archery for over 3yrs now, started using a 20lb Samick Sage from my instructor and over time as well as hitting the gym, I bulked up my arms and last year I bought my first compound bow: The APA Mamba with a 65lb draw and I love it. As for preference, I just like a fast projectile going down range. Same logic with my bb/pellet guns, now in a survival scenario, the recurve makes a lot more sense because they're easier to maintain. That's a case of practicality over preference, took my nieces out for an archery shoot for the first time last night and they loved it so they'll have a spring/summer hobby with Uncle real soon :)
I personally don't like compound because it's something where you are expected to hit the bulls-eye as much as possible. I feel like when I'm shooting compound it's less skill more just going through the motions.
I'm instinctive fingers shooting vintage compound on both hands. It fits nowhere, no competition, no comparision. Maybe only it fits to Rambo movies xd I think it means I like also the traditional way and siplicity but at the same time I like the short length of compound bows, let off and Rambo ofc. But don't like the look of modern compounds. i try traditional archery as well.
Gotta love that archery has so many variations,. Have a 20lb fibreglass kids bow,. 60lb compound (15 years old) been getting back, just bought a hunting recurve (compound style riser). In 50lb,.
Next will be and olympic style recurve, traditional bare bow recurve, and a horse bow,( I'm a little interested in thumb draw).
So many different variations to learn about.
For me it's like 10 games in 1.
Mechanized archery takes the joy out it, if you ask me. Heading into the woods with a simple stickbow in hand is good for the soul.
I really enjoy your clips in general and acknowledge the articulate manner in which you get your ideas across...you are a professional educator after all. It is interesting...and frustrating, that you would find yourself having to justify why you do what you do...isn't it the simplest thing in the world......you've tried all types and you know what suits you.
I will make an analogy comparing different archery styles to different types of cars....a "Stick and string" Long-Bow can be compared to say a 1930's style of car...manual gearbox, leaf-sprung suspension, little of no sound-deadening...any performance is totally up to the driver's skill. A modern take-down recurve ( or long-bow ) and even a fancier "Bare-bow" set-up is perhaps like a 1990's car...with the benefits of modern materials, modern suspension and brakes and even automatic transmission...pretty-much anyone can get solid performance with a moderate amount of practice and nerve. Now, a modern compound is still "Shooting"...you still have to hold, draw, aim and release ( sort-of )...but what you're shooting is more akin to a Formula 1 car...requiring an engineering and mechanical team and extremely high tolerances, in terms of expectations. So, you try and then pick the "Car" or "Bow" that best suits your personality...even if that means MULTIPLE different types.
I played competitive Baseball as a teen-ager and learnt that I had to spend many, many hours to train both my brain and body to achieve a very unique skill ( ranging and then throwing a ball fast and accurately to various distances )...it took a lot of work, but then I really appreciated the growth. It's the same with Golf, with Surfing even. Other people are less about the process and more fixated on the end result, regardless of how they got there...that's their right.
Watching so many people on UA-cam throws light on the fact that different people are able to achieve similar things, via TOTALLY DIFFERENT PATHS. Look at say Jeff Kavanaugh and the groups that he can get...rapid fire, from 50m...with a factory-made Bear Trad. bow. Similar ( or better ) to the groups that sometimes win U.S Championships with highly refined gear, ranges and wind-indicators etc etc. But then he's been doing it for well over 40 yrs and Lord only knows how many shots he's fired...in one clip, he talked about his old Bear Grizzly exploding...but he estimated he'd shot perhaps 200,000 arrows through it!!
So, experiment...or not, and find out about yourself. Somedays you'll want Pizza, others you'll want BBQ...just as long as none of us ever presume to tell anyone else what tastes, or drives or shoots the best.
I feel the same. No one would call a Roman Ballista a bow and arrow, although it does shoot large arrows. The same, I feel, goes for the compound bow. It does what a ballista does. I consider it a mobile catpult. if you want to hunt or shoot with all the bells and whistles, just because it enables the "manly man" to shoot bows way to heavy and sights to pinpoint a hit, you might as well wait and use a damn gun. If you like compounds, more power to you, as for me nothing doing!!
TheDave570 dude get real, it’s not even close to that polarized. This is pure ignorance in your comment. Yes the arrow leaves the bow in 1 second. Past that your playing with ballistics same as a normal bow. Just have a bit more push. Most can’t even shoot 45 pound compound draw so it’s not what you think. Think of it this way, improved efficiency. Do you think compound hate generator video guy shoots wooden limbs? No probably the high tier carbon fiber foam core limbs a grand each. Hes shooting a drastically improved bow compared to a normal bow.
@@1014p You don't seem to know the concept of what a Ballista is, so with all that BS you just spewed, you play with your manly-man toys as you wish. BTW, I am not ignorant. No more replies to you, sir
TheDave570 reply or not, a ballista is a large cross bow. If you really knew anything you would know the shoot form is near identical for traditional and compound. This is supporting the bow in the draw, stability, and all the micro muscles needed to hold the shot. The only advantage compounds provide is let off which at most is 60% and honestly makes it harder to hold. The other is high efficiency in limb energy to the arrow. Both of these executed wrong in the shot will affect the shot badly. Lot more forgiveness in traditional shooting.
Comparing a compound bow to a ballista is a bit ridiculous... Sure they both use mechanical advantages to be more "powerful" etc, but one requires a damn weapons platform to be used... Maybe if we were talking about crossbows, since the similarities between the 2 are greater but even then. It's like saying "Oh you use an M14? Pfft, might as well just use a Vickers. I'll stick with my M40 thanks" Just because they are mechanically different, doesn't mean it's not a rifle. A compound bow has mechanical differences, but the fundamentals are the same.
I have not even started with archery yet, more a gun target shooter, I am just doing my pre-start study :) And one of my basic question as an amateur, who only seen the archery in TV was, how should I decide what to shoot. I didn't understand what's the difference, if there is some evolution and the compound is the latest step, or those two worlds exists side by side and which one is better. So thank you very much for all your videos, seen several of them in last 3 days and learned a lot. I was already leaning to the recurve, the modern "olympic" version, with all those weights, sights and modern shape and materials, but your argument and reasons convinced me completely now. What I am looking for in archery is actually achieving the perfection like with the compound, but with recurve there is much wider span of seeing the progress. As you mentioned, in compound after getting some base skills, it is just about keeping those tens and you never know, if you are just lucky or improving that much, while with recurve, I guess I will be lucky to start with some 7s and move up to the 9-10s in some time. Which might be even longer, then I am willing to admit :) But it will definitely show me my progress in finer steps, then with the compound. I am super competitive person, so the only reason I will do it is to be the best, but at the same time, shooting whatever is fun and with bow it also has this traditional class.
I grew up shooting recurve and sort of always had a bias because of that.
I used to view a compound as less personal with every shot and less involved as far as skill.
But I’ve come to respect and shoot all aspects of archery and bought my first compound a few months ago for bowfishing.
No complaints.
Grew up being taught barebow/recurve and I love it but having progressed into target shooting with rifles, I found that compounds give me a closer experience to that. Getting back into archery after a long hiatus, my first choice was a compound due to the speedy learning curve. It's also offers better conditions for hunting due to compact form factor and let off. But for quick fun, the barebow is always nearby.
I own a firearms company and have always been into weapons but last year picked up a new PSE Xpression and now I’m gravitating towards the peace and quiet of 3D. Plus after the initial investment it’s way cheaper too!
My interest in archery began in the late 80s. Actually during my military service. I contacted the local archery club to learn how to shoot a bow and got a recurve bow for target shooting. Because that's what was done in the club.
Quite shortly after this, the compound bow became a fad, inspired by the Rambo movies. When I started archery I didn't even know there was such a thing as a compound bow.
Suddenly all kinds of wilderness stores started selling compound bows. These were often not familiar with archery. Neither the customers who thought it was cool to shoot a Rambo-bow.
The compound bow became mythic, and some believed ordinary bows are toys and compound that's a real weapon...
I'm glad I didn't jump on a trend but became genuinely interested. Now I want to start shooting bow again, but this time it will be a hunting curve and I go for instinctive shooting. I realize that's what I really wanted from the beginning. Chromed details, stabilizers and laser sight, release: no, it feels like a machine rather than a bow!
However, it is still not impossible that in the future I will get a compound bow as well. One thing does not necessarily need to exclude the other. But it will hardly be a strict target recurve again.
Years ago I found myself getting a bit bored shooting my 50 lb wooden recurve. Trying to give myself a boost, I decided to go up in pull weight and it was hard but I got 'bow stronger' thanks in part to lifting moderate weights, as in weight lifting. For me, shooting a compound isn't enjoyable when the compound eases off on the pull. I simply love recurves and the physical pleasure of the pull and the focuse on form. Yes, I still own a compound but almost never shoot it.
I started out on a compound bow, mainly because I live in an area where hunting is a way of life so a compound bow is a way to go because you need the precsion and the ability to leverage the let off to line up your shot while hunting. I shot that for 10 years and sort of lost interest in archery for a while because it became boring. Then I started shooting a traditional recurve bow and it renewed my interest because I had a new set of challenges. Then a near by park installed some 3D targets and found a new reason to break out my compound bow for more than just hunting. I have now found a couple of local clubs where I can do 3D archery tournaments. I watched survival Lilly do one and thought that would be fun. I now have a renewed interest in archery, I got a recurve bow, a long bow hybrid, and of course my compound bow. I also got into fletching my own arrows for my traditional archery equipment, which provided even more ways to enjoys(or despise) archery. I don't think I'll be fletching arrows for my compound bow because just about any sporting goods store sells quality carbon arrows that are factory fletched and all I have to do is cut the shafts to length and install the inserts. Sometimes I get lucky and find shafts that are the right length that I can buy off the shelf as is, but those are few and far between. I'm actually excited for this weekend and I will be attending my first 3D archery shoot. I will be taking my compound bow, but I hope to be proficient enough with traditional archery to be able to tke my recurve or long bow to a shoot, hopfully either late this year or sometime next year.
I absolutely agree with you. I love recurve bow with finger shooting for its simplicity and I regard it as a challenge .
Years ago after I had graduated High School, I asked for a recurve bow for Christmas. What inspired me was most likely the Robin Hood series on Netflix, I think. I went to Bass Pro with my parents and personally picked out the bow that I wanted, which was a PSE Mustang recurve takedown bow at 60" length and 45 lb draw weight. I had gotten a few other things with the bow such as a whisker biscuit, bow stringer for safer stringing and unstringing, a back quiver, the arm guard, leather draw finger guard glove (probably not the right term), and carbon arrows. It was nice being able to test out the bow in their indoor range before purchasing it and committing. I was excited! I looked up a local archery range, which was free to use but offered lessons if I wanted them for a fee. There I went! Flying down the road in my car, unsure yet excited about finally bringing my dream to life!
Once I got to the archery range, I immediately saw other archers there, but 90% of the time the archers were compound shooters. I watched a group of compound archers hovering over their bows with tools, adjusting and tweaking their bows. I may recall one of them admitting that it could take about 15 minutes of tuning their bow before even shooting. That sounded and looked ridiculous to me! Here I am with a simple recurve bow where all I had to do was string it and I'm ready to go. I might have gained some kind of dislike for compound archers, because all this that I saw and heard just didn't sound like what a traditional bow should be, with wheels, gadgets, sights, trigger release, and just the sight of it being primarily metal! I would feel stressed sometimes as well with me being out numbered by all these "fake archers". At the time that's how I felt. There's still a grain of that in my feelings toward compound shooters. Anyway, I did eventually ask one of the elder archers WHY they shot with compound bows. Their responses were something along the lines of "I have back issues and can't handle the pull of a recurve". This made sense to me and I respected them, specifically, more. Every now and then, yes, another recurve shooter would show up, but just like me they felt outnumbered.
Back to me finally shooting for the first time. I did receive some general guidance from another recurve shooter where he had me shoot through paper to see how my arrows flew and such. He then advised me to start with closer targets. So, here I am standing on the firing line, knocking my bow, drawing back the string, aiming, and letting loose. Mind you, I had the whisker biscuit on. I began to hate that thing as it slowed down knocking my arrows and I felt like it caused some resistance to my arrows flying through it, slowing it down. I went full barebow at this point, screwing that unsightly piece of crap off my bow, and just using the smooth polished curved arrow rest. This.. this was it. This is what real archery felt like it should be. It felt amazing to shoot this way, a free and unburdened feeling. Tapping into my instincts, which is what I shoot. Instinctive. Like NUSensei, I enjoyed the challenge with the simplicity of the bow and the power of the bow in my body. When I did hit the target, I was happy wherever it hit. If it hit close to the bullseye that just made me extra happy. I feel as though if I had been a compound shooter myself, I would have been more stressed by the tinkering and distracting gadgets and probably would have given up archery. Last bit of note, I always thought "might as well get a gun" whenever I saw a compound bow.
Wow, you were gatekeeping before your first arrow!
A few years ago, my son went paint balling. Next door was a archery range. I was able to hire a bow and shoot for an hour for peanuts compared to what my son was throwing away next door. There were 3 of us there that day, a longbow man, a compound guy ( who incidentally started work at my office the following week), and me on a recurve. I enjoyed it tremendously, but didn’t get a chance to try the compound. I managed to get my wife to an archery lesson and she loved it, where after one lesson she was ok with wanting to buy a bow, and do it again. Our instructor, was a world champion 3D bow hunter. So we ordered our compounds this week.
I think the form matters less, the enjoyment and development matters more. Esp. Starting some thing new later in life. Keeping a fresh and open mind.
I shoot compound, but not that way you told. Only the CU category is that, what you said. But yes, that the category when all of the technology is used in a compound bow.
I always loved the technology behind compound bows, but I didn't like, that the aiming is bit like, shooting a gun. When I started with Compound, I used hunter equitments, but after some years I changed to Compound Barebow: basicly I took off my hunter signs, the peep-signs and the d-loop. That's why both tradicional and modern shooters look me "that I'm nothing in archery": tradicion archers - because I shoot modern bow; modern archers - because I don't use the opportunities what a compound bow gave me.
That is for me both fun to shoot and challange. But for fun I have a tradicional horsebow too (I'm planning to buy a hunter recurve too).
My start to archery was interesting. The first bow I shot was a 90# yew bow when I was 7. I was hooked after seeing the arrow fly in the general direction of the target ( even though it landed about 12feet in front of me) that I just had to get a bow. Since my dad's response was that archery is an expensive hobby and there was no where to shoot, I saw it fit to make my own bow out of a branch from an avocado tree that had fallen down after a recent storm. It was awesome having my own bow, but my sister ruined it for me twice. The first time she carved it up thinking you needed to take the bark off to make it a real bow, and the second time I shot her in the back... I wasn't able to pick up archery again until I moved out of the house. Oddly enough I was still allowed to practice marksmanship.
Tinkering with my bow is specifically why i switched to compound. I used to shoot olympic and i found it awesome, i still adore it. I shot traditional too and i loved the nock and shoot style and the freedom of it but tinkering with my bow was my deal breaker for my style as well as the portability and the lack of need to take the strings off. I love all styles but i found the one i'm comfortable using.
"using modern Olympic archery equipment you don't count what you earn you count what you lose"...superb and well put (quite enough of an argument why to go for traditional bows)
Solid points. And I completely understand what you're saying, especially that part about something like 8 being stressful result for compound shooters. When you think about it like that, it does seem like it's taken way too seriously, but it is what it is. Preferences, and like your attitude seems to be, nothing bad in diversity :) I shot recurve about 15 years ago and I enjoyed it so much. There were these compound shooters at the range then and at that time, I felt like it wasn't "real" archery any longer and more like shooting with a gun (yes, totally different, but with all those sights and releases it was easier to compare that to gun shooting than recurve... and I've always shot with guns too). Our recurves had only basic stuff: arrow rest and nock-ring (if that's correct in english) on the string. No stabilizers or sights at front, because those we considered to be highly non-traditional bow shooting items. It was then...
Now, after couple of years, I started again. This time I went full compound. Why? Because I wanted a bow that could be efficiently used for hunting as well. My compound shooting isn't so much as range-shooting, or aiming at competition (tho gotta admit... the thought does have it's charm, because I'm highly competitive person). I shoot because I want to see those arrows fly and hit the target, preferably around the "kill zone", since if I'm ever going to use my bow for hunting, I gotta be damn sure it's a clean shot and the animal will not suffer. But that's another topic...
I like the tinkering part. Not only for bows, but everything. I'm just that guy who likes to tinker with all kinds of mechanical gadgets :P Even in my other hobby, airsoft, I spend hours and hours fine tuning my airsoft guns, building and taking them apart while testing different bits and pieces to make them shoot as well as possible. Heck, most of my airsoft hobby is tinkering with the guns and less actually playing the games, which is pretty stupid... anyway...
To me, recurve now seems like it's much too basic to be interesting. Not saying recurve is bad, it's just not for me currently. If you're into archery, any kind of archery, then that's completely fine. Tho I do see this foolish gap sometimes between compound and recurve shooters... mostly recurve... like they're watching down on other. Like the bow you're using is something less. It's mostly recurve shooters who have this mind set about their bow being "the one and only". Well, people sometimes turn into elitists if they're not intelligent enough to see it's all good how other people like their hobby.
Me? I'm completely fine shooting at the practise with recurve shooters, with my hunting bow. It's not even "proper" target bow, so I'm somewhere below target compound guys to some recurve shooters :'P But always glad to see someone who's into archery and doesn't feel superior to someone else who's not sharing that absolutely same mindset. That diversity is what makes this hobby so great and everyone should embrace it. Who knows, perhaps one of those recurve shooters will want to try out compound and absolutely loves it, or vice versa. Keep an open mind :)
Oh and good video!
I like the feel of the recurve bow when everything lines up and you do a good shot. I still enjoy having my arrows really grouped as that only needs some tinkering with the sight afterwards.
I tried compound in the club as other members want to share their joy of course but wasn't my style. It is something you just know after shooting it a couple of arrows and go back to what you enjoy. To each their joy and keep shooting.
I'm totally new to archery, and I shoot compound, or at least I'm learning to shoot compound.
Reason being I want to shoot accurately as soon as possible.
But my coach asked me to start with recurve, just to make sure I know how archery actually works.
And now I'm in a bit of dilemma. I enjoy the process of archery, which means I actually enjoy recurve more, but at the same time, I still want to be accurate soon.
That's why I bought a compound bow and looking forward to buying a recurve bow someday in the near future.
NUEensel ,,,, I concur, I am 67. I have 11 bows, one homebuilt carved bow 64 inches, four high brand compounds, four high brand recurves , two high brand long bows. I owned many other bows from pre-school age, but early age were all homemade. I have been an archer all those years but off and on as time, place, life permitted. I have been in competition with Mr. Perfection many times, that being myself. I have found through out life the Joy of anything is more important than the success of doing it expertly. I am in constant perpetual motion of experimenting and modifying out side the mainstream of archery. Even some things I developed have been years before I saw them in modern bows. I came to find that competition, beyond that of friendly endeavors, makes the joy of shooting vanish into a haze of self despair. I often mix multiple techniques from all of archery. But it is the joy I seek since I do not need for creating food. This is why I avoid those statements to enter into the professional world of archery. I enjoy watching those competitions for much the same reasons, joy of the game. ,,,, Thank you for all your videos.
My opinion is depends on the purpose... If you go hunting or outdoor, go for compound, if target archery indoor from 20 yards, go for recurve, if just fun and relax go for trad bow.
I shoot all three started with recurve, then trad and compound. I don't really agree with NuSensei regarding the tweaks and buying gadgets for bows, as I shoot recurve first and always bought and tried something new... Many many options and tweaks for recurve as well, like setting up pressure button, stabilizers, playing with arrow spines, arrow tips, trying different limbs, sights, risers etc. And then, if you go 10 yards back, you can start to play again! Never ending story with recurve too... Also could be very expensive, if you want a competition setup like proper riser and limbs. And the setup makes a big difference with recurve, not just depends on the archer's skills... It also can be frustrating if something wrong with your setup and you don't have the consistency what you expect.
And after spent lot of money for proper recurve setup, you're still nowhere compare to a compond bow in terms of accuracy and FPS and consistency. For the half of the money you can buy a compound package and shoot better then with a high end recurve setup...
If you want to challange yourself with compound and not just shoot 10s indoor, then go further like 50 yards and outdoor and have the same fun with recurve from 20 yards!
I just love shooting barebow. The simplicity of the tool really just adds to the enjoyment for me. I find it to be more of a symmetry between myself and the bow without all the balancers, stabilisers and compound doesn't appeal to me because of that reason. This allow me to become a better archer instead of relying on other added on tools.
It's funny how you bring up tinkering with a compound like you'd tinker with a bike or a car, and honestly as a mechanically minded person who loves tinkering, that's a huge part of why I love compound bows, I love making all those small adjustments for myself and others, making an adjustment and getting it right is so satisfying. I lean towards compound, but I also shoot traditional, and when I broke my nose (incidentally tinkering with a compound bow in a press), I shot traditional for a month, which when I got back into compound, I actually shot the second best score I ever have on a 3 spot, so I think very much both trad and compound shooters can learn a lot from each other, I really don't think there should be the divide there is and it'd be very beneficial for both sports for more trad shooters to pick up a compound and for compound shooters to pick up a trad.