The finest bow in the world may not suit one person because there is something that he just doesn't like about it. Some archery ranges allow the use of crossbows, while many do not; almost all commercial/public ranges allow used compound bows http://www.squidoo.com/mathews-drenalin-bow. The game will die just as easy when hit by the longbow, as the compound. A good mid range compound bow is the Browning F5 Tornado Bow ($350) - great for tight hunting situations, has the Ignitor 6 HP cam system, a precision machined aluminum riser, 450 Plus cables and Dynaflite 97 string. The long bow has been killing Friend, foe and food for centuries. You also get the NRG Hybrid Performance Cams and you can launch arrows up to 300 fps (feet per second). Recurve archery is much more of a mixture between the accuracy of compounds and the difficulty of longbows (you also have more competition generally). The long bow has been killing Friend, foe and food for centuries.
The finest bow in the world may not suit one person because there is something that he just doesn't like about it. The 6" of draw length adjustment is great for growing archers. As a beginner you should start with a fairly light bow. Then as your strength and technique in prove, you could keep the riser you have and just change the limbs. A good mid range compound bow is the Browning F5 Tornado Bow ($350) - great for tight hunting situations, has the Ignitor 6 HP cam system, a precision machined aluminum riser, 450 Plus cables and Dynaflite 97 string. Compound you have Matthews, Hoyt, PSE, Bowtech etc. Start too heavy and you'll be pulling with your arms and shoulder, the parts that are strong.
The bow of your dreams is the one you shoot consistently and accurately with ease. The finest bow in the world may not suit one person because there is something that he just doesn't like about it. Good brands are hoyt bear matthews bowtech parker and reflex. I wouldn't buy a recurve because it takes more musclese that you wouldn't have developed and can make you less accuarate where as with a compound it feels like your holding a feather at full draw because the limbs obsorb the energy hope this helps. For a beginner I always like recurve better than compound. The Firestorm from PSE has a short axle to axle design which makes it another excellent choice for tight quarters. 40lb would be sufficient. Recurve archery is much more of a mixture between the accuracy of compounds and the difficulty of longbows (you also have more competition generally). The "down side" is that you do have to hold the string back while you aim, and you can hold the bow itself with only hand. You see, in day to day activity you rarely use the proper archery muscles. Specially here in the US, more people shoot compound than recurve, during tournaments even on the NAA side of things, there are as many compound shooters as recurvers.
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This is so very wrong!
The finest bow in the world may not suit one person because there is something that he just doesn't like about it. Some archery ranges allow the use of crossbows, while many do not; almost all commercial/public ranges allow used compound bows http://www.squidoo.com/mathews-drenalin-bow. The game will die just as easy when hit by the longbow, as the compound. A good mid range compound bow is the Browning F5 Tornado Bow ($350) - great for tight hunting situations, has the Ignitor 6 HP cam system, a precision machined aluminum riser, 450 Plus cables and Dynaflite 97 string. The long bow has been killing Friend, foe and food for centuries. You also get the NRG Hybrid Performance Cams and you can launch arrows up to 300 fps (feet per second). Recurve archery is much more of a mixture between the accuracy of compounds and the difficulty of longbows (you also have more competition generally). The long bow has been killing Friend, foe and food for centuries.
The finest bow in the world may not suit one person because there is something that he just doesn't like about it. The 6" of draw length adjustment is great for growing archers. As a beginner you should start with a fairly light bow. Then as your strength and technique in prove, you could keep the riser you have and just change the limbs. A good mid range compound bow is the Browning F5 Tornado Bow ($350) - great for tight hunting situations, has the Ignitor 6 HP cam system, a precision machined aluminum riser, 450 Plus cables and Dynaflite 97 string. Compound you have Matthews, Hoyt, PSE, Bowtech etc. Start too heavy and you'll be pulling with your arms and shoulder, the parts that are strong.
The bow of your dreams is the one you shoot consistently and accurately with ease. The finest bow in the world may not suit one person because there is something that he just doesn't like about it. Good brands are hoyt bear matthews bowtech parker and reflex. I wouldn't buy a recurve because it takes more musclese that you wouldn't have developed and can make you less accuarate where as with a compound it feels like your holding a feather at full draw because the limbs obsorb the energy hope this helps. For a beginner I always like recurve better than compound. The Firestorm from PSE has a short axle to axle design which makes it another excellent choice for tight quarters. 40lb would be sufficient. Recurve archery is much more of a mixture between the accuracy of compounds and the difficulty of longbows (you also have more competition generally). The "down side" is that you do have to hold the string back while you aim, and you can hold the bow itself with only hand. You see, in day to day activity you rarely use the proper archery muscles. Specially here in the US, more people shoot compound than recurve, during tournaments even on the NAA side of things, there are as many compound shooters as recurvers.