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Good morning ladies and gents, my name is Josie and I shall
be one of your flight attendants on this voyage. Please read the safety
instructions provided and ensure your seat belt is engaged. One of my
colleagues will be along shortly with the menu, so sit back and enjoy the ride…
I've been shooting with 2020 since last April (2012) after doing
the 5-week intro course with Asher. I had shot before back in Devon in a casual
way so it was great to finally get a decent grounding in proper archery
technique. Immediately afterwards I joined the club and there aren't many weeks
I haven't shot since. It’s seriously addictive!
My first bow was purchased back in August last year. After
much deliberation, questioning club members and a bit of testing I settled on the
Hoyt Formula Excel with Formula Excel 30lb limbs; and what a choice she was. I
still think she is far and away the best choice for me and I never tire of
shooting her.
The starting set-up was quite simple: just the bow, string,
Joomong Scorpion sight (which is a good beginner sight if you’re strapped for
cash, although the bracket can shake loose if you don’t Loctite it) and a
plastic Hoyt Super rest. Since then I've added a Shibuya DX button, Spigarelli
Evo II rest and Easton X10 long-rod to the equation which has made a
considerable improvement. In terms of arrows I shoot Easton X7 Eclipse at the
moment, though that will be changing. More on that later.
I can usually be found shooting at 2020 on the weekends;
either Saturday, Sunday or both if I have the time. I try to score as often as
I can and chart my progress (which isn't always upwards!) so I have a good idea
what effect any changes to my bow or technique make. To give you a rough idea,
my very first Portsmouth (shot on 19th May last year) scored 213. On 23rd
December I shot 500.
My goal is to try and join the 550 ranks this year. It's a
tough goal but I'm sticking to it. I’ll let you know how it goes!
2 comments:
Heh, similarly the sight on my Hoyt Excel stripped the threading from the screw holes in the riser. Every time I shot an arrow it was accompanied by a loud metallic *klink*. I ended up glueing the bracket in place using the same glue I use to attach the points on my arrows. :)
My first 'proper' bow was known in the club as 'scrapheap challenge' as it was pretty much entirely lent, donated or otherwise foraged for! At least once every shoot someone would say 'Something's rattling on your bow Heidi' and I'd reply, 'No, SOMEthing isn't rattling, EVERYthing's rattling'.
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