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Thread: Getting Started

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    Luke Clayton
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    Default Getting Started

    Getting Started
    by Luke Clayton


    Luke Clayton


    Getting started right is important, regardless the endeavor. Take an academic such as algebra for instance. Without proper instructions from the get-go, learning algebra is impossible. One has to build on the basics before it’s possible to advance.

    This axiom is especially true when it comes to learning to properly shoot a bow. There are a few basics that must be learned and mastered before skills improve and arrows can be shot into tight groups at distant yardages. Steve Trimble with All Star Archery makes his living setting up bows to perfectly fit shooters of all ages and, if they are newcomers to the sport, giving instructions that help them quickly become proficient shooters. I recently took my 10 year old grandson Jack Zimmerman over to get his new Mathews Genesis bow set up.

    Jack is not a newcomer to the outdoors, he’s taken several whitetail deer while rifle hunting with his fraternal grandfather. Jack is a very patient, studious young hunter. He’s learned to be quiet and still when hunting and moves only when game is not looking his direction. He’s steady as a rock during the shot for someone so young and veteran hunters I know enjoy listening to Jack tell about his hunts. There’s no ‘Hollywooding’ when Jack tells his story. It’s all nuts and bolts with plenty of details.

    Jack is reverent when he approaches an animal he has killed. He understands and used the word “killed’, one ‘harvests’ grain or vegetables. Animals must be killed before they can be transformed into hot links or chicken fried steaks! Even at his young age, he understands the gravity of his actions. He is aware that taking meat from the wild for his family to enjoy is an honorable act. He understands that some of his friends think that the steaks and roasts their mothers prepare for dinner magically appear at the meat counter of the local grocery. Jack has learned from hunting that in order to enjoy a venison steak dinner, an animal must be killed. He understands man is at his core, a hunter just like the coyote or bobcat. Many in today’s urban world have been so displaced from the natural world that they no longer feel the hunter’s call but, deep, deep in their genetics, it’s still there. Jack fully understands the venison or wild pork he is fortunate enough to take for his family to eat could just as easily be killed by a roving pack of coyotes or, a big male bob cat; it’s nature’s way.

    Jack is extremely observant regardless whether receiving instructions from his basketball coaches or, learning the basics of a brand new sport. He was full of questions as he observed “Mr. Steve” installing sights, arrow rest and string peep on his new bow.

    While watching Trimble put the finishing touches on his bow, Jack asked questions such as “What keeps that little peep sight in the string?” and “What makes the end of that little pin so bright?” Steve took the time to answer them all, and then he handed the bow to Jack and asked him to step over to the shooting range. It was time for some instructions.

    I was honored to be present when my grandson loosed his first arrow from his fully rigged bow. Trimble instructed him not to grip the bow too tightly and to gently squeeze the release when the sight pin, the center of the peep sight and the target are in perfect alignment. “Make sure and keep your finger behind the trigger release so you won’t accidently release the arrow while drawing the bow.” My mind back tracked many years ago to when I received the same basic instructions. Some things never change and the basics of archery have remained as constant as the Polar Star throughout the ages. Pulleys, peep sights and arrow rests are modern additions to the bow but skills necessary in making the arrow fly true remain the same.


    Photo by Luke Clayton
    Bow tech Steve Trimble with All Star Archery helps young Jack Zimmerman get set up with his first bow

    Jack heard the resounding ‘whack’ as the arrow impacted the target, not far from where he was aiming. His next two arrows grouped very close to the first. Trimble instructed his new student to continue practicing as often as possible. “Concentrate on the shooting form I’ve shown you and don’t over do your practice.” instructs Trimble. “ Shoot 5 or 6 arrows and then rest a couple minutes. It’s better to shoot 10 arrows using perfect form and making sure to execute each shot to the best of your ability than to randomly shoot three times that many.”

    Jack’s serious bow training is underway. He left ‘Mr. Steve” with a bow that was expertly rigged and ready to shoot. He’s learned that when he employs the basics of proper shooting form, he is quite capable of hitting his target at closer yardages. Longer range shooting and, ultimately hunting with his bow will come a bit later, after many enjoyable hours of practice.

    Here are a few things Jack will learn as he perfects his shooting skills and ultimately, makes the decision to hunt with his bow. I’m positive he will become a bow hunter. It’s in his make up, he loves a challenge and he loves to hunt.

    *One becomes a much better hunter when he or she decides to accept the challenge of hunting with the bow. It’s important to get close, really close, usually inside 30 yards of game before releasing an arrow tipped with a broad head. A bow hunter doesn’t snipe game from a distance, he learns to play the wind, use camouflage and watch the animal’s body language to get within bow range.

    *Tracking is an intricate part of bow hunting. Jack will learn to examine the arrow after the shot on game to determine exactly where the animal was hit. He will learn to follow a sometime very sparse blood trail to recover his animal. He’ll learn to make ever widening circles ahead of an animal he’s trailing to pick up the trail.

    * He will learn to be even more patient when hunting. He is partaking in a sport in which there is seldom instance gratification. He will pass shots inside 20 yards of game animals simply because they do not present the right broadside or quartering shot. He’ll learn a great deal about the anatomy of the animals he hunts.

    * When he harvests his first game animal with stick and string, he will join the ranks of those of us that choose to hunt with a more basic, more challenging method. He will become a kindred spirit with the Native American, whose blood still cruise his veins after several generations.

    And, I’m betting Jack won’t ever forget that morning he spent with ‘Mr. Steve’, getting his new bow rigged and watching his first arrow reach its mark! Jack’s journey has begun!


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  2. #2
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    Bryan Shrum
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    Great article Luke. It's great to watch kids learn the ropes to the things we all love about the outdoors. Especially when those kids are our own kids or grandkids.
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  3. #3
    James .N

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    Excellent read Luke, I alway's look forward to what you might write next for us.

  4. #4
    Luke Clayton
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    My pleasure! I truly enjoy sharing my articles here on the USCA.

  5. #5
    Richard
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    Great artical, Luke. I wish there had been places like that back when I was much younger and yearning to shoot a bow. now I'm just satisfied with stalking close with a rifle .

  6. #6
    frank
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    good to see that there are still young ones that are interested in hunting and fishing... seems to me way to many kids are heading down the wrong path in life...thanks for the write up luke....as always i enjoyed it
    john 14 : 6

  7. #7
    Luke Clayton
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    We have to do what we can to introduce kids to the outdoors. Today,most kids live in urban or suburban settings.It's not like the days when we stepped out the back door and went squirrel hunting.

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