Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Archery Basics - Recreating Success



Remember, the key to accuracy, is doing things the same way on every shot. Same grip, same anchor, same release timing, and same follow through. The purpose for practicing form is to program your mind
and body to recreate the same elements of form on every shot. No variation!

Your going to hear me say this A LOT!!

When your practicing, think about how your going to grip, where and how your going to anchor, when and how your going to release, and how your going to follow through. Make a mental check list before every single shot.

Be deliberate and deadly. Shoot like your life depends on it!
Write it down on paper. Make it an event for your mind body, and spirit!
 
If you don't practice deliberately  you will always just be another arrow flinger.  Nothing wrong with that if it makes you happy, but if you want to get good, there is only One Way, the Hard Way!

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Archery Basics

Archery Basics
There are three elements to Real Archery, (don't like the term Traditional, compounders invented it), ; Form, Instinct, and equipment.

The line you shoot, left or right of the target is mostly determined by the quality and c
onsistency of your form. Stance, balance, anchor, release and follow through. Lot's of work to be done here.

The up and down or high low line you shoot is nearly all about good instinct. Stump shooting and progressive target practice improve this.
Progressive target practice is having staggered targets set up one after the other at a new distance. 3D shoots are a form of this.

You shoot the closest then, walk past it to shoot the next target at a greater or different distance. For example, if the first target is say 10 yds, the next will be 15 yds, The first target is behind you and out of site to shoot the second.

When shooting progressive targets always focus on the spot you want to hit; Never your arrow. I've also found that verbalizing your shot, when practicing, helps you to focus.

After the shot note the high/low difference between the closer and farther target; Write it down for study and thought later.


Lastly, Equipment - equipment set up can be some different from archer to archer. Gonna say a bit about the bow today. There are other things to be considered like the proper arrows, tab or glove etc., but for now just a bit about the bow.

The two most important elements are brace height and nock point.

Brace height, as I measure it, is the distance from the string to the back of the shelf when the bow is braced or strung. I start by setting mine at 6 1/2" and adjust for arrow flight from there.

Nock point is the place you nock your arrow on your bowstring. There are brass nock points you can buy to attach to the string. personally I like to wrap just enough dental floss on the string to nock and hold an arrow under. It's less snaggy then the brass can be, there's less wear and tear on the bow string, and it's a whole lot cheaper.

When adjusting these, have someone stand behind you and watch the flight of the arrow. If the arrow is tail wagging left and right the Brace height has to be tinkered with. Generally it's too low.

If the tail end of the arrow is going in high or low, the nock point is in the wrong spot. I begin at 1/2" above level to the shelf and move it up or down until the arrow shaft flies true. My own nock point is likes 5/8" above shelf level but that can be vastly different from one archer to the next.

There's a lot more about equipment but the Brace height and nock point are a good place to start after you have the right arrows, cut to the right length for you, with the correct spine weight.

Good Shooting,
D

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Easy or Simple


My thoughts on Bow building and life in general:

Easy or Simple - Which one is the most beautiful to you? Which one is most obtainable?

Easy: not hard or difficult; requiring no great labor or effort. (A synonym for Lazy)

Simple: not elaborate or artificial; plain: a simple style. Not ornate or luxurious; unadorned; Unaffected; unassuming; modest: a simple manner.
Not complicated: a simple design.

Why is it human beings always want to adorn something that is simple and uncomplicated to begin with.

For instance Bow finish: A Longbow, to me at least, is something left to us from a bygone era. Something with history and cultural significance. Longbows are a connection to our primitive and simple, not easy, past.

A Longbow finish should be simple and repairable; natural. Oil finishes and a bit of wax do that.

But, in the hunt for “easy” we've now developed Epoxy finishes that make the Longbow look like it was dipped in plastic. If you think repairing an Epoxy finish is “simple” I have some property under the bridge I want to sell you.

Kids, plastic has nothing to do with the romance of the Longbow; to my way of thinking.

A Longbow is a work of art, they're not for everyone. A Longbow's elements should recall it's heritage. Adding modern easiness, is an indicator to me that maybe those that do should consider shooting a compound; they're easy but not simple.

Modernizing the Longbow is like taking a Rembrandt or a Matisse and correcting it with crayons.

It's about choosing easy or simple isn't it?

Thursday, August 30, 2012

The Alistera Project

The Alistera Project

"Oh, the joys of those who are kind to the poor!
The Lord rescues them when they are in trouble.
The Lord protects them
and keeps them alive.
He gives them prosperity in the land
and rescues them from their enemies.
The Lord nurses them when they are sick
and restores them to health."

Psalms 41 NLT


I am building two custom bows to auction off for Alistera.  We want to bring her to America to a burn center.

David O' Brien Terry, a 27 year old vet from Tennesee is building a website to support the work.. We believe God is in this and in time, kids all over the world will be helped. Alistera is just the beginning.
I know there will be unbelief, opposition, and doubting Thomas's but that's par for the course, isn't it.. We are going to see God do GREAT things because we TRUST Him.


We will be seeking contributions from other outdoor manufacturers, and craftsmen to be auctioned off from the "Alistera" website. This is an opportunity for Craftsmen to help change a child's life. If your interested in adding to our "5 fishes and two loves" contact me. God will bless your gift just like he did 2000 years ago.


If you would like to donate dollars, you can send your contribution to "Heart of God International Ministries" at the address below.  HGIM is helping kids like Alisera all over the world and here at home. They help to provide education, health and spiritual assistance in developing nations.  They are giving a voice to those who cannot speak for themselves.


Just put "Africa/Alistera" in a memo along with your donation and mail it to:

Heart of God Africa
PO Box 4582
Riverside, CA 92514
Attn: Denise Bucher Matthews
Re: Alistera

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

A View From My Hammock

A view from my Hammock . . .

"Coming home from the mountain, as I pulled my old pickup onto the highway, I was immediately struck by the whizzing of cars passing by me.

I realized I was only driving 45 mph on a 70 mph highway!

I had been on the mountain for a couple days, just listening to the creek , the wind, and the occasional voice of a bird or animal.
I had spent two days and nights just resting in the Lord, listening for His voice, and lifting up those of you who asked me to do so. Now, it was back to the high speed chase of humanity.

Adonai spoke to me about a lot of things. He answered some long standing questions I've had, like; Why does the whole world hate Jews and Christians? He told me why He gave Moshe the Ten Commandments; very interesting!

He talked with me about the persecution of Jews and Christians going on world wide, without the notice of the media or our "government."

He talked with me about Southern Sudan and His plans for that nation. He told me over 2 million Nuba Christians have been murdered there by Islamic Jihadists.
He told me His plan for Southern Sudan was to richly bless them.

I didn't know this, but He told me Southern Sudan is the "only" nation that has established their embassy in Jerusalem!
God said a long time ago, "I will bless those who bless Israel!"
He evidently means that! Denise Bucher Matthews, you will have a big piece of what He is doing there. :)

He talked to me about falling Pine Cones; :)!!

He told me Mr. Benjamin Netanyahu has a Bible study in his home!
Not a study of Jewish commentaries, but a true Bible study. Straight from the horses mouth, so to speak! Pray for that study group!

He told me much more.

I'm still digesting everything he told me. It's simply amazing!

My last afternoon, I was sitting watching the clouds float by, three times Yeshua's face materialized in those clouds!

Most of all, he talked with me about us meeting Him in those clouds very very soon!  (See 1 Thessalonians)

Thursday, July 26, 2012

A Longbow For a Boy



Here's a few pics of a bamboo core longbow I recently built for a ten year old boy.

35#@28" - 56"ntn - Hickory riser - Green Mountain Dymond wood overlays.

By the way, the arrows in the picture have some old MA-2 Broadheads on them.  MA-2's have been around longer than I have.  There's a good reason for that .  .  .  :)




Wednesday, July 25, 2012

A Ten year Old Boy





The last couple days, I've been building a longbow for a ten year old boy.

To someone whose done something, anything really, for so many years, it can become just another day at work. This bow was different . . .

As I built the bow, I began to think about the boy it was being made for. I wondered if his experience would be like mine.

I was exposed to Longbows when I was just seven or eight.

I had ridden a horse down to visit my Uncle Rollie Burnham. Rollie and his brothers were Mountain Men. They lived in the Cowiche Creek Drainage up under Mount Rainier. They fed themselves and their families with what they could grow, gather, or hunt.

After being stuffed with a home grown, fried chicken, corn bread and gravy, with all the trimmings lunch by Rollie's wife, Aunt May, (you could never eat enough to satisfy Aunt May, her favorite observation was, “Boy if you don't eat some more you're gonna dry up and blow away!), Rollie called me over to show me one of his personal treasures; partly because he knew if I didn't leave the table soon, Aunt May would feed me so much I would get a stomach ache and partly because Uncle Rollie had decided it was time for me to see this thing he loved so much.

With a child’s unbridled anticipation, I waited for him to bring this “great thing” out of it's hiding place.
It was an old Longbow. Rollie said he got it from a man he grew up with in Kentucky. I could see the name Howard Hill written on it. No Fiberglass, just an old wooden bow. I had never seen or heard of one before!

Rollie strung it up and said, “Here, see if you can pull 'er back!” With Rollie guffawing and laughing at my efforts, try as I might, I couldn't budge it. Not an inch! You see, that old bow drew 100#!
I might have weighed 60 pounds soaking wet! It wasn't going to happen.

The result of that days encounter was that my boys heart was challenged. For the rest of the day, Rollie told me story after story about hunting deer and elk with that old bow. In my minds eye, I could see him sneaking up on an old Buck or a bugling Bull Elk, slowly drawing the bow to it's full weight and watching the arrow fly silently through the air to it's intended mark!

Rollie was one of my boyhood heroes. Heck he still is!

I decided, that very day, I wanted to grow up and be just like Uncle Rollie, hunting and living off the land with my longbow and horse.

As I mused on these things, I wondered what doors of imagination this bow would open for the ten year old boy I was building it for.

I finally got my first bow when I was ten years old.  It wasn't much of a bow by today’s standards. Just a non-discript longbow that pulled 35 pounds. When I took that bow out, suddenly I was transported to a new world!

One moment, I was with my Uncle, up on Mount Rainier, chasing Elk. Next, in Bakers Canyon, on Cowiche Creek, hunting big Mule Deer and Blacktail Bucks!

As I emptied my quiver of arrows, (I only had three), I arrived in the “Yukon” facing down Grizzly bears and Giant Bull Moose!

The best and most exciting times were in “Africa” hunting dangerous game! Lions, Leopards, Elephants, Cape Buffalo . . . (These hunts actually took place in my Parents back yard and the “Big Game,” well, they were my Mother's trees and shrubs . . . Got a few lickens for that, but Trophy hunting is expensive I guess).


For me, the Longbow has always been a door to the imagination.

I wondered, as I built Jaxon's little bow, if it will be the same for him; I think it will.

Uncle Rollie has been gone for a lot of years now and I'm finally figuring out what he knew when he showed me that old longbow so many years ago.  He showed me, that day, how to keep my child’s heart through all that life could and would dish out.

Do you know a kid that needs a dream? Introduce him or her to the Longbow and a quiver of arrows. Their lives will never be the same and neither will yours!


Jaxon's older sister with her “door” to the imagination.


A letter from Jade and Jaxon's Father . . .

Dear Darryl,

“Thank you for your generous offer on the bows. When Jade saw that bow,and then shot it, a whole new light glowed from her. When we were bringing the bow back to you, I could feel her disappointment.

Thank you so very much, raising 5 boys and a young lady takes a lot of doing. Archery, when starting out is expensive, with your help, we now have a young lady who is all smiles and full of questions on this wonderful adventure of traditional  archery.

She has made herself a quiver and her own arrows since we have returned and has been shooting her bow named " Hope".
To tell you thank you is a understatement, I cannot find words that express what  needs to be said.
I have shot her bow and the performance is awesome along with  the graceful beauty of the bow.
Thanks for making this possible!

Troy Rider

Sunday, April 1, 2012

The Sharptail Back Quiver

Here's the newest edition to my line of Quivers.  I designed the "Sharptail" for those of you wanting a tough, firm, but soft quiver, with large capacity for field shooting, 3D shoots, stump shooting, or if you're like me, bird hunting; pheasants, Ducks, Geese, Grouse or what ever kind of winged creature you feel led to pursue.

The quiver pictured is Buffalo over a full Bull hide liner with an Elk Hide Collar, adjustable strap.  Full triple layer broadhead protection.  This quiver is all handmade and stitched to last a life time it is simple, functional and of the highest quality.

check it out at www.cowichearchery.com



Saturday, March 10, 2012

Osage Bow and Elk Hide Quiver






I accepted an order for this left hand Bow and Quiver set with self knocked arrows but never got paid for it so it's for sale.
The quiver is Elk hide over a softened Bull hide liner with Antler buttons and medicine bag.  The Bow is of Cherokee design.  Osage riser and lams with Bamboo core; Moradrillo overlays. 64"nock to nock, 42# @ 28"  Left Hand. $1000.00 + shipping and handling.  SOLD
www.cowichearchery.com

Saturday, March 3, 2012

The Origin of the First Nation Bow - A Tale of the Abenaki



My AncestorWahunsonacok father of Pocahontas



"THE CREATION OF THE BOW AND ARROW"
From the Abenaki, (Real People) also known as the Wôbanakiak, (People of the Dawn land)


One day, a hunter was out looking for game. Suddenly out of a bush came a great black bear. The hunter had only his spear and his knife to protect himself.

- "Awassos", said the hunter, "I have not come here to harm you so I will leave you in peace".

But the bear, Awassos, had another plan and started to walk toward the hunter. The hunter, fearing for his life, decided to turn and walk away. The bear knew he was stronger than the man and soon started to pursue him.

To protect himself while running, the hunter turned his spearhead behind him. Seeing a thick bush he ran through it hoping that the branches would slow the bear.

As the hunter ran, he realized that his spear was caught on a vine along one of the bushes. In a desperate attempt to free the spear, he pulled on it with all his strength.

Suddenly, just as the bear caught him, the hunter lost his grip and the spear flew towards the bear. The vine became a natural sling.

To the hunter's surprise, his spear struck the bear in the chest, inflicting a mortal wound to the animal.

- "Iahi!" cheered the hunter.
- "Wliwni, Kchi Niwaskw!"
- "Thank you, Great Spirit, for saving my life, and providing food and clothing for me and my family."

Giving homage to the Great Spirit, he realized that a new weapon could be made.

- "Enni!" said the hunter, as his wonder became greater.

Instead of using a tree, he could take a branch from a tree and instead of using a vine; he could make a string from milkweed to make the new weapon.

The hunter gave homage to the Great Spirit for giving him this new aid to his hunting.

And this is one story explaining how the bow and arrow were created!

Collected thanks to Joseph Bruchac, Abenaki storyteller.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Lakota Stealth Quiver

Lakota Stealth Quiver


For those of you interested in the Stealth Quiver:

There are plenty of options but they all depend on what you want and what you're willing to pay.  I only use the best leather I can find and generally materials run about $75.  I line the quiver with an extra layer of leather and the point end of the quiver is  tripled in thickness to insure Broadhead safety. 

Generally, I use oak tan cowhide but have built them with other leathers such as Moose, Elk, Goat etc, if I can find it in an appropriate thickness.  Those leathers are very expensive.
Another option if using the oak tan is to have it dyed.  I use a quality leather dye in a color of your choosing. Most like a dark brown or chocolate color.  The quiver is double laced with synthetic sinew, by hand.  The Quiver easily carries a dozen Broadheads.

All in all it is high quality through and through and I wont skimp on materials.  It's got to be the best or I wont build it.  There's about ten hours of labor in one.
Minimum price for Oak Tan would be $160.00.  That said, if you want one, let me know and I'll get on it.  I'll need payment + shipping before I ship.  I'd have to know where you are to determine shipping, packaging, and insurance.