Little long on the reply and I know people have said what I'm about to repeat but don't "choke" the bow, don't hold your breath, bend knees slightly so you aren't locking out, and most importantly brother don't "slap" the trigger. It should almost "shock" you when you pull through the trigger. Keep doing bow stuff man you will be impressed 👍
Remember to keep your grip on the bow loose also as mentioned before make sure that you are reflecting on the shot keep your bow arm up until you can actually hear the arrow impact. On your release do not punch the trigger on the release aid just squeeze until it goes off.......if you get into the habit of making the shot as soon as the pin lines up you will have inconsistencies........try this "draw the bow with an arrow and hold it on target until you're form starts to break down as soon as the pin starts floating around more than normal let down........ Do not shoot any arrows! , take a breath and draw and do this again" if you do this 10 times a day for a week or two you will notice that you can hold on the X for longer periods without feeling like you need to rush the shot. Hope this helps!
i saw that when you shot your bow you were punching the trigger . normally when you punch the trigger your shots will move inches away from where you were aiming . so i would recommend that you draw and curl your finger around the trigger and push with your front arm and pull with your trigger arm that will cause the shot to go off and if you did it right your shots will land closer if not dead on the spot you were aiming at.(don't squeeze just pull and push)
stance looks fine. if there is a level on your pin sight make sure to use that to level out your bow. if not it looks like the arrows all hit low right(consistently). adjust your sight just like you would a rifle.
Thank you everyone for watching my video I will be making some more soon. I appreciate the opportunity to learn from all of you. should I do more bow or a gun video next ?
FOLLOW YOUR ARROW. If the arrow hits low then move sight down. If it hits right move all pins to the right. The farther then yardage the farther your left to right will show. Use your level when aiming ALWAYS. Don't over grip or torque the bow. Try to watch the arrow fly into the bull's-eye through the sight, and keep that bow hand up without peeking too early. PRACTICE MAKES PERMINANT.
Not bad at all. Most of your arrows were pretty close to the same place with respects to where you were aiming. You just need to move your sight down and slightly to the right.
If I remember right it seemed that all but one shot landed low to the right, I would move the 20yd pin to the right slightly and also move it down slightly and then try a three or four shot grouping again, since it has been such a long tim since this video was posted I would assume you have it all lined out now and are nailing the dots at 20 yds purdy consistantly, but this is what my suggestion would be based on what I saw in the video. I have a Hoyt Magnatech bow that i have been shooting again the last 3 days, my gouping is good at 20 yds but 30-35 yds needs improvement, my biggest issue is muscle fatigue, just not in good shape for the 65lb draw weight right now.
Not sure how old this is so if you have already had these comment sorry I shoot an Tx 2000 and it’s a great bow. 1 your draw length seems to be too long. Leading to # 2. 2 you appear to have inconsistent anchor point. 3 because of braw length you may be torquing your bow. All 3 problems will cause you to miss the aim point.
Its not a trigger ..its called a release.and the bow is not a xt2000...that's the type of limbs it has.the bow is most likely a tec bow....razor,havoc or one in that series.
Your fallow threw after you shoot is very important , you drop your bow pretty quick after you shoot try counting to 2 or 3 after you shoot I used to have the same problem I wanted to see were my arrow hit before i t did hit just a thought
I'm an archery novice as well, but I, like others noticed that your draw length is too long and it's preventing you from having a consistent, stable anchor. As others also said, your grip on the bow should be much lighter. Change those two things and I bet you'll see improvement. Otherwise your form didn't look too terrible at all.
You're holding the bow wrong. Your anchor point is also completely messed up. You need 3 points of contact: right hand on jaw bone, string touching corner of mouth and tip of nose. If you do these correctly, it's pretty easy to hit bullseyes with a hoyt at 20yards.
Put a small break in your elbow and relax you grip and take your time for the shot don't rush it. It looks like you are dropping the bow too soon, follow through with the shot.
you don't have any anchor points. try get at least two anchor points normally the tip of your nose and the corner of your mouth. you will find that if you do this your shots we be more accurate and you will be able to see through your peep better.good luck with shooting
Don't listen to the keyboard archery commandos. I bet by now you are very dialed in St 20 yards. Keep the sport alive. You did not imply that you knew everything or didn't want advice. Give the guy and his camera man a break for all the novice archers.
Demonic Games He's wearing glasses. It is very hard for people that wear glasses to tough the string with the tip of their nose because all they can see is the rim of their glasses.
your stance is outdated and probably the reason you need that arm guard . try a more open stance like the olymic recurve archers. your anchor is to far back so your torqing the string upon relase pulling your arrows to the side in a combination of griping the bow rather than just pushing it and maintaining a good pressure point, you are grabbing on release even thou you have a sling. and your follow-trough is non existant due to grabbing the bow . neither do you have time to aim so the body can settle down and your punching the trigger and not using rhomoid to execute a back tension release