I have seen a seller on Amazon tried to explain the ideal draw weight via the number of push ups you can do, which i call a complete nonsense, as archery uses very different muscle groups. I liked this one!
I started out with a 50 pound recurve and even though I'm a big guy I could only shoot ten to twelve arrows before putting it down. I was exhausted and wouldn't even touch my bow until days later ruining my accuracy. Now since I'm looking into horsebows and the different shooting technique I'm just going to get a 30 pound and go from there. My goal is to have fun. Accuracy THEN power!
I started on a 45lb BuckTrail Metis, fell in love with archery, but couldn't seem to get my technique right and get that consistency down. Only after that purchase I've started watching archery videos, found your channel, recently bought a 26lb Snake and I can finally work on my shot process, try out different anchor points, focus on my stance and on my release without the constant pressure of wanting to let go asap. Thank you very much!
I am capable of pulling 110 lbs for 10 mins shooting and i shoot with 60 lbs now but i started with 50-60 lbs i never pulled lower than 50 greetings from Bulgaria, Armin i couldn't say start with lower i will say if you are fit enough start with what you feel comfortable for example if you can shoot with 50 pounder 30 mins shooting without serious tiring then shoot 50 or 60 if your arms start hurting lower 10 and shoot 40
I've just purchased my first longbow after years of compound bow shooting. I've listened to your advice and picked up a 68-inch 30lb Oak Ridge Northaro as my first bow. I tried the same bow in 50lb draw weight and decided I didn't want to fight the bow while I learned the ropes. With 30lbs, it is a joy to go out and shoot 50 arrows and just concentrate on my technique .
I'm new to archery. I am by no means a weakling, but after trying several bows in the shop I found even moderate draw weights uncomfortable, so I chose a 30 lb longbow. It felt good, I was hitting the target, and I wanted to keep shooting. I felt in control. Heavier bows were like work. I don't want to work.
we had the same discussion on a Romanian FB archery page, when I said the same thing: especially for horsebows (they have let off) you should be able to hold 10 sec at maximum draw to be comfortable and proficient in shooting. Here, there was a trend with 80-90 pounds bows. I am glad that is over, because it got me started with 50 pounds in thumb archery, and after 3 years of struggling I got down to 35 and I feel great. Even so, I have to learn from the beginning, and even worse, I got to get reed of the bad habits. Good work with this channel, I wish there where more like this.
@@anikibrother7691 for the first bow I would choose the weaker one, so 30lb. It is much better to learn the moves with a bow that you can hold at full draw at least 30 seconds.
Wow... you keep your word, and I’m impressed by this video. Sound logic all around, and definitely an eye opener about my naivety. Thanks for posting this!
Very true, Armin. I'm an extremely thin person due to an unhealthy lifestyle, and having bought a thirty pound bow (which I do struggle with after ten secs) I quickly realised that it would be no use to try practising with it. So I'm waiting to get myself one of the Snake bows at the lowest draw weight to learn on and build up the muscles and form without the risk of injury or putting myself off the idea of archery completely.
Snake is plastic toy (but true you need to feel something basic first - so less you pay for it - better), the other bow was pure fiberglass limbs with just wooden elements glued to it. and wrapped with the strand. Limbs are usually covered with adhesive labels, or PU "leather". This sort of kit may brake your joints, no matter how good, or strong you are. The locking of the bow after releasing is so mechanically rapid, and hard, that it gives your brain no time for this movement, or it is not relaxing the muscles after a shot. If you want to have relatively good feeling how it will be when you will learn something and shoot longer. So I presume you will be getting there better. All the best!
Wow,this really was helpful. Just getting my first horse bow,and wanted an expert to give me advice on poundage. Thanks for answering my questions. Best wishes.
This is what I needed to see. I went in to a local franchise sports store and the salesman was saying it's perfectly fine to start at 45#. So glad I didnt listen to him!!
Great Video Armin thanks! Totally agree. Just want to share my way. You sent me on a quest in November 2017 to learn thumb release and shoot horsebows. Was shooting 60 - 65# Compounds for nine years at that time. Never in my life I shot 3 fingers. So I got a Snake Bow in 28# just to see and try. Then I got a Flagella Scythian in 30#, and additionally a Alibow Fiberglass Turkish in 30# just to see how short bows click for me. I really struggled with the new world of "thumb release" but I liked it really much. Shot almost every day. Learned that my thumb needs a thumbring tried many, found the right ones. Then I got the book by Justin Ma and learned Gao Yings form. Needed 7 Month of continous iterations to get the form good. Training at every occasion. Then went to a Alibow Fiberglass Ghengis Khan in 35# which is still fun today. My do all, go everywhere bow. Take it with me on trips and shoot in the woods. But then I got the Ming Emperor III in 40# (@28") which is 49# (@31" my draw). And boy, I could now really "feel" the bow. And I learned what handshock is when I switched back to the fiberglass bows lol. The Ming Emp is just so great. Then I needed another 2 month just to get khatra into the form and do the right thing with the bow hand. Because even when Gao says dont do it, it just "feels" way better to do it. That where nine month and that was the point where I was able to group consistenly with all of my bows even when switching bows and arrows. Do the same thing all the time, just minor adaptions. I would say yes, everytime start low as a beginner so you can successfully iterate through your form every shot. But then it depends. For me the higher poundages start to give me a real "feeling" for the bow. I like it. But I worked my way up to there. If your goal is Olympic Recurve you need to be able to shoot your ends without fatigue. No question. If you just want to enjoy archery for the pure plinking fun of it without going up in poundage, great do it! My goal on the other end is on some day be able to feel what "they" felt. A 80# horsebow. Like Gao Ying said that was there military entry level. That is my goal to go there some day, working my way up. And buying new, heavier bows on the way up there, so I can enjoy many of them ;-) Now there is an Akinci on the way to me, the next step up in #. After doing all this I lost the interest in my compounds. Dead capital in the basement now ;-)
@@ArminHirmer hi Armin and thanks for your hard works of inspiration motivation and teaching. I've recently got into arching and would really appreciate it if you could tell me what was the last bow you tried and recommended please? Many thanks 😎🙏🏹
I wish I had lmao I just got a 60lb bow cause I thought with what I can lift 60lbs would be easy but even though I can just about draw it to full draw every time holding it there for 10 seconds without shaking after 5 or 6 is not gonna happen
25 years ago I used a 60 pound compound bow, now I want to start shooting again but I can't draw it anymore haha, I will buy a modern adjustable bow instead, was looking at the Bear Archery Legend XR, very adjustable and a good price.
Thank you for this video. After almost 20 years of taekwondo my knees said: no more high jumps and I was introduced to archery and will start with next month. Dreaming of a longbow or flatbow (which I learn this is what I mean) since childhood I will try one with 62 inches and 25 lb/ pretty enough for me I guess (f, 57 y old, in pretty good condition). I hope the martial arts training for many years will help to adapt to the techniques in archery but I also learned:“do“ is my personal way. Thanks so much for the great videos and how you move looks great. You definitely met the wood in the cycle of stages a second time ☺️
Amazing content! Flash back 3 years ago. Accidentally saw some videos on archery and after several months watching archery videos, I convinced myself (and my wife) to buy one. I bought a standard recurve in an archery shop; a Cartel Sirius Plus set. Tested several limbs with different draw weights. They gave me 30-ish limbs to start. Felt miserable draw! I kept asking for lower draw weight. I never learned archery before and I'm not that fit. I also have back pain so have to be extra careful. Finally settled with 20 pounds bow. They said it was too light for me and I will need heavier weight soon. I said no, this is the draw weight I feel comfortable to start with. Start training right away. Man, I was struggling even with 20 pounds bow. I even stopped training for a while due to the shoulder pain. After that, I only shoot occasionally. So most of times my bow just collecting dust. Fast forward current time. For the last few months, I trained regularly together with my son. This morning, I shot 111 arrows; from 5 meter, 10 rounds, 11 arrows per round, less than 30 minutes. Same old bow, 20 pounds. Tight grouping, no missed target area. So relax, so much FUN! Now, I finally feel ready to try heavier limbs. Thinking of buying 26 or 28 pounds Sirius Plus limbs. This video (together with Nu Sensei video on choosing the right draw weight) are the one that I watched 3 years ago. Guided me, to start with lower draw weight. I thank you, Sir. You have made my archery journey enjoyable. :)
I started with a 50ib bow just because it's what i had. I didn't have money for a new bow when I was younger but I eventually got good with it at about 50-60 ft out. It required more practice and shorter practice sessions which in turn probably slowed down my technique learning though.
I'm a 110 pound woman. My aunt who has been playing archery for like 20 years and has kids that play archery even on horseback says that I can start with 30 lbs or 27 lbs. My archery club leader said not to but I ended up buying the 27 lbs instead of the 25 lbs because my aunt said the quality of the 25 lbs bow wasn't good. I just hope I'll be okay with it when it arrives. My aunt started with 30 lbs but her body is much bigger than mine. It's not the end of the world for me right? Is it okay to practice holding the bow in full draw 10 seconds a couple of times everyday but not release it as if I'm shooting an arrow? 1:41 basically doing this everyday, is it good practice?
@@naylisyazwina6836 as long as you don’t dry fire you shouldn’t have any problems with the limbs. But just remember that stretching your bow over and over reduces the elasticity of the material the limbs are made of. So it will cause wear on the bow no matter what but not as much as actual shooting. As for bow weight I don’t see a problem with picking any weight bow you want to shoot as strength is based on the individual and there really is no one bow weight that is universal for different sexes. It’s more or less how it felt to you and if you think you can shoot that comfortably for semi long periods of time. I would have said to try pulling your relatives bows back and see how some feel at different weights cause that’s the best way to tell the difference for you as an individual but that doesn’t matter since it sounds like you already ordered it. If it is to heavy for you to shoot for say an hour then shoot for 45 minutes or something like that to reduce wear on your body. Either way your gonna need to practice shooting your bow. Also if your talking about compound bows you can’t really try theirs as it is sized to you.
@@kylecaraway8662 I'm starting with traditional bow, like the one in the video I think. My aunt are a long way from where I am at. The video from this guy and other websites all say that it would be good for women to start with 20 - 25 lbs and men start at 30. I actually have pretty weak arms. Maybe I should have bought the Archery Exerciser Trainer Puller Arm Strength Trainer thing as well but kinda too late now I can't remember if the bow I tried at my club was 23, 25, or 27 lbs, really can't remember. But I def wouldn't be able to shoot 45 minutes the first few times. Maybe like 15 minutes. I could message the president again and ask what poundage that bow was. Oh yeah I have club activities twice a week starting next week, the other days I would have to just practice on full drawing the bow every 10 seconds or something. I heard some stretches with dumbbells help but I don't have any
@@kylecaraway8662 and do you think there should be 1 day or 2 days in a week where the bow should rest without any pulling or it's fine for it to be used everyday? And yeah I won't dry fire it
@@naylisyazwina6836 it’s fine to use everyday or ever other whatever you want. You just have to remember that wear will occur and you will have to get a new bow eventually. It could be decades or years it depends on the quality of the bow. All in all if you get into it you’ll probably want more then one bow anyways so I wouldn’t worry to much about the wear.
I had to start at 40 just because of hunting laws where I live. I was accurate from day one though. I was told its its hard to be accurate with a bow. Just had to play around for about 5 minutes then I found where hold. Ive gone to a compound bow now just for the bow and range advantage but my recurve is still fun to play with every once and while.
I'm surprised nobody mentions exercise bands. They are sold in sets for $15 and include 15, 20, 25 lbs and pull from 12"-35". I use them to warm up my archery muscles but they are also handy for the draw weight test.
I have been trying to decide on this for days now thank you very much you answered and made my decision for me in 3 minutes and 45 seconds so I have subscribed and I look forward to seeing more.
Just got my first bow (an X7 Blitzwolf/Thunderwolf / Junxing) 30lbs and despite having slight difficulties doing a full draw yet (getting there with practice) I'm honestly relieved that 30lbs is an ideal starting point even for a noodle like me at times. Thanks!
Excellent video. Right after I got my first "horsebow" (for lack of a better word), I decided I wanted to try thumb release. Unfortunately, while it's draw weight is just fine for me with Mediterranean, it's far too heavy with thumb. Soon after, I got a 30# Alibow Turkish fiberglass bow to practice thumb release with, and it's really helping (and since even my lightest arrows are too heavy and stiff for it, your advice on khatra form helped immensely with that as well). Currently, I'm considering getting a couple more thumb rings, to see if there's another type I prefer.
I would say draw weight depends a lot on your personal attributes. I am a beginner and I took recurve bow with 38#. I am tall and I am pulling to 30` so my actual draw weight is even bigger and... it is not a problem at all to me. At Saturday I shoot more than 200 arrows and I stopped because lack of time not because I was fatigue. So best advice is exactly taken from video - just grab a bow in nearest store and try which draw weight is best for you.
@@ultranium7414 I am big guy with more than 110 kg. And not all of it is fat :) basicly if you are doing body weight exercise like pull ups or body row you will pull bow with ease
I will say that being a massage therapist made my thumbs insanely strong, so shooting thumb is easier for me inherently than three fingers. I've done it a few years, otherwise, it'd be starting from scratch. Based on watching you perfect technique should stem from the lats and rhomboids in the back. Can just look at Bruce Lee's back for a good visual, lol. Most of us have strong rhomboids from typing, etc, but lats are underused so focusing there will help the most with assisting the drawing arm.
Excellent video! I’m 67 years old in average physical condition and I’m getting ready to start my first archery lessons. This video really helped me to choose the right bow weight. Well done. I have a 29.5 inch draw length so for my first bow I plan to buy a 60” Black Hunter recurve or 62” Black Hunter hybrid longbow with a 25-30 lb. draw weight. I would love to get your opinion on this.
hi! how tall are you? i'm 1.83cm and my pull is @29"-30", black hunter also looks like a good alternative for me, although the size is small for my height, do you think I can break it with my draw length? In the website it appears that the arc is @ 28 "(the seller told me that it supports a maximum of 30")
I'm starting with a 50, wish me luck lol. Haven't shot much, did use a long bow few years back, maybe it was 40lbs. Didn't be to much trouble, may need leather finger straps though
I just got myself a 45lb bow, I've done archery before, and I climb, so I have a strong back, etc etc. I can draw it and I can shoot it, but this is just not ideal for me to practice, my fingers are in pain every time I draw it hahahahaha, plus no matter how much I climb, my shoulders are so weak, so I can't hold my draw for long. So now after watching this video I'm getting a 25Lb bow so that I can be more comfy and focus on technique. Thank you!
@David Munir They can check a lot of things..your pull length...if 50# is right for you..or you can do what i did...and just buy the 50#...but then i got the 30#...whichwas way better for me.
About a month ago I bought my first bow it's a fiberglass horsebow with 35 lbs draw weight and after a month practice now I buy another bow but with 27 lbs draw weight to practice my form 😀 A common beginner mistakes
The weekly 3min videos are great and always helpful. I've been really getting into stump shooting (not strictly stumps) and working up in draw weight. Anyone know at what draw weight stump shooting starts to really destroy arrows (if I stick to 10gpp)?
I am watching this after ordering a 50lb recurve off Amazon for my first bow 😬, I am quite strong so I’m still going to attempt to learn a good form and technique and get in a ton of practice with it. It’s been done before, I’m up for a challenge and I might even get a decent workout too. Feel free to ridicule me but I just spent a fat chunk of my money on it and I know for a fact that it is a good bow.
@@user-vf2zy6fl1d it’s going great actually, aside from the fact that I’ve broken about 30+ cheap arrows, fibreglass and carbon. because they go right through my foam targets and into or through my hardwood fence. I ended up buying a cheaper 30lb bow from the same brand before the 50lb came and after a couple of days of practicing I switched to the 50 and never used it again so I gave it to a mate, mostly because i find it far more accurate and easier to land tight groups but also because the 30 lb just isn’t as explosive and fun to shoot. I only just recently got some sweet gloves and I’m quite confident with the 50lb now that I don’t rip up my fingers anymore . I haven’t shot it in a couple weeks though as I’ve been busy but the last time I picked it up I hit four headshots consecutively from 15 metres and can reliably hit body shots from about 30 metres (like 90ft) if I’ve got my contacts in and It’s not too windy, though I’ll often shoot from the same marked spot which makes it easier. I’ve shot a couple wild turkeys and wiped out some invasive cane toads in the bush near me though I can’t help but think a 50 pound recurve bow was a bit of overkill for that kinda thing 😂. As the arrows would fly right though them never to be seen again. All in all I’m definitely enjoying archery as it’s very engaging and fun showing friends how to shoot and I’m glad I got the 50lb because of how fun that thing is, only complaint is it can start to strain your centre back muscles at first but now I’ll only start to get sore after about an hour of target shooting. I’m going to look into getting some actual sights for it sometime soon and go hog shooting once I can reliably hit my headshots from a bit further away, also going to need some stronger arrows with broadheads and fluorescent fletching. Would be happy to hear any recommendations.
Wow! Great video! I recently purchased a #15 compound bow for my 7 year old son. Hes having trouble drawing it back. Any suggestions on a bow that might fit him better? I'm not seeing a lot of youth bows that have lighter draw weights online.
Instead of pulling the arrow/bowstring back is there a legitimate technique to push the bow out? I find that for some reason this much easier on my body.
My husband's bow is 50lbs and I can pull it, but I think I'll go with a 35lb bow because of this video. :) My compound bow is heavier than that but it's a compound bow lol.
this is like the Jean-Claude Van Damme of bows
More like Jeremy Wade of bows.
My thoughts exactly...😊
“Don’t try tuu SHALLENGE ME!”
Oh god, that's been bugging me for a year now.
"Armin looks... familiar, but I cant quite put my finger on it."
I could see John Wick training with him
I have seen a seller on Amazon tried to explain the ideal draw weight via the number of push ups you can do, which i call a complete nonsense, as archery uses very different muscle groups. I liked this one!
i cant even do 5 push ups but have a pse snake 25lbs-
@@jaislater soo what?
Push ups are pushing motion and bow takes pulling motion.
@@thomasjackson2342 we should do pull ups instead of push ups?
@@echodelta4250 We should do them all and more for a glorious physique.
I started out with a 50 pound recurve and even though I'm a big guy I could only shoot ten to twelve arrows before putting it down. I was exhausted and wouldn't even touch my bow until days later ruining my accuracy. Now since I'm looking into horsebows and the different shooting technique I'm just going to get a 30 pound and go from there. My goal is to have fun. Accuracy THEN power!
I started on a 45lb BuckTrail Metis, fell in love with archery, but couldn't seem to get my technique right and get that consistency down. Only after that purchase I've started watching archery videos, found your channel, recently bought a 26lb Snake and I can finally work on my shot process, try out different anchor points, focus on my stance and on my release without the constant pressure of wanting to let go asap. Thank you very much!
Enjoy
I am capable of pulling 110 lbs for 10 mins shooting and i shoot with 60 lbs now but i started with 50-60 lbs i never pulled lower than 50 greetings from Bulgaria, Armin i couldn't say start with lower i will say if you are fit enough start with what you feel comfortable for example if you can shoot with 50 pounder 30 mins shooting without serious tiring then shoot 50 or 60 if your arms start hurting lower 10 and shoot 40
I've just purchased my first longbow after years of compound bow shooting. I've listened to your advice and picked up a 68-inch 30lb Oak Ridge Northaro as my first bow. I tried the same bow in 50lb draw weight and decided I didn't want to fight the bow while I learned the ropes. With 30lbs, it is a joy to go out and shoot 50 arrows and just concentrate on my technique .
Thank you for basically giving people permission to pit the ego down and focus on form development. 🙏
I'm new to archery. I am by no means a weakling, but after trying several bows in the shop I found even moderate draw weights uncomfortable, so I chose a 30 lb longbow. It felt good, I was hitting the target, and I wanted to keep shooting. I felt in control. Heavier bows were like work. I don't want to work.
nice what model did you get ? Still shooting ?
Armin, Thank you for all your knowledge of Archery, learned allot.
we had the same discussion on a Romanian FB archery page, when I said the same thing: especially for horsebows (they have let off) you should be able to hold 10 sec at maximum draw to be comfortable and proficient in shooting. Here, there was a trend with 80-90 pounds bows. I am glad that is over, because it got me started with 50 pounds in thumb archery, and after 3 years of struggling I got down to 35 and I feel great. Even so, I have to learn from the beginning, and even worse, I got to get reed of the bad habits.
Good work with this channel, I wish there where more like this.
Should i get 30 or 35 lbs for a new bow ? Im a male 511 , 160 lbs.
@@anikibrother7691 for the first bow I would choose the weaker one, so 30lb. It is much better to learn the moves with a bow that you can hold at full draw at least 30 seconds.
Do you think 30 pound good for teenager like me? (I'm 16)
@@noobaccount7580 I think its good. It might be a bit hard to pull at the beginning, but it gets easier as you practice.
@@anikibrother7691 just ordered 30lbs recurve bow hope it's good for me c:
Thank you for an excellant video. You make perfect sense compared to some of the videos I have watched. Keep up the great work.
Wow... you keep your word, and I’m impressed by this video. Sound logic all around, and definitely an eye opener about my naivety. Thanks for posting this!
Excellent advice! Thanks! I use 25 lbs bow (am just a beginner), feels comfortable and as you said, easier to notice what I am doing wrong.
Refreshing to see someone get straight to the point... Awesome video as well.
I love your real-world advice and common sense guidance. Great video. Thank you for taking the time to make it and share it.
I would love to join your Archery classes
I love the way you teach
Bro much respect for you, you just answered all the questions in my head in less than 3mns. i definitely gonna follow you . Thank you
So true. Agree with you 100%. Nice, condensed vid. Great fun.
Very true, Armin. I'm an extremely thin person due to an unhealthy lifestyle, and having bought a thirty pound bow (which I do struggle with after ten secs) I quickly realised that it would be no use to try practising with it. So I'm waiting to get myself one of the Snake bows at the lowest draw weight to learn on and build up the muscles and form without the risk of injury or putting myself off the idea of archery completely.
Snake is plastic toy (but true you need to feel something basic first - so less you pay for it - better), the other bow was pure fiberglass limbs with just wooden elements glued to it. and wrapped with the strand. Limbs are usually covered with adhesive labels, or PU "leather". This sort of kit may brake your joints, no matter how good, or strong you are. The locking of the bow after releasing is so mechanically rapid, and hard, that it gives your brain no time for this movement, or it is not relaxing the muscles after a shot. If you want to have relatively good feeling how it will be when you will learn something and shoot longer. So I presume you will be getting there better. All the best!
Wow,this really was helpful. Just getting my first horse bow,and wanted an expert to give me advice on poundage. Thanks for answering my questions. Best wishes.
This is what I needed to see. I went in to a local franchise sports store and the salesman was saying it's perfectly fine to start at 45#. So glad I didnt listen to him!!
Thank you for this from the future
Great Video Armin thanks! Totally agree. Just want to share my way. You sent me on a quest in November 2017 to learn thumb release and shoot horsebows. Was shooting 60 - 65# Compounds for nine years at that time. Never in my life I shot 3 fingers.
So I got a Snake Bow in 28# just to see and try. Then I got a Flagella Scythian in 30#, and additionally a Alibow Fiberglass Turkish in 30# just to see how short bows click for me. I really struggled with the new world of "thumb release" but I liked it really much. Shot almost every day. Learned that my thumb needs a thumbring tried many, found the right ones.
Then I got the book by Justin Ma and learned Gao Yings form. Needed 7 Month of continous iterations to get the form good. Training at every occasion.
Then went to a Alibow Fiberglass Ghengis Khan in 35# which is still fun today. My do all, go everywhere bow. Take it with me on trips and shoot in the woods.
But then I got the Ming Emperor III in 40# (@28") which is 49# (@31" my draw). And boy, I could now really "feel" the bow. And I learned what handshock is when I switched back to the fiberglass bows lol. The Ming Emp is just so great.
Then I needed another 2 month just to get khatra into the form and do the right thing with the bow hand. Because even when Gao says dont do it, it just "feels" way better to do it.
That where nine month and that was the point where I was able to group consistenly with all of my bows even when switching bows and arrows. Do the same thing all the time, just minor adaptions.
I would say yes, everytime start low as a beginner so you can successfully iterate through your form every shot. But then it depends. For me the higher poundages start to give me a real "feeling" for the bow. I like it. But I worked my way up to there.
If your goal is Olympic Recurve you need to be able to shoot your ends without fatigue. No question. If you just want to enjoy archery for the pure plinking fun of it without going up in poundage, great do it!
My goal on the other end is on some day be able to feel what "they" felt. A 80# horsebow. Like Gao Ying said that was there military entry level. That is my goal to go there some day, working my way up. And buying new, heavier bows on the way up there, so I can enjoy many of them ;-)
Now there is an Akinci on the way to me, the next step up in #.
After doing all this I lost the interest in my compounds. Dead capital in the basement now ;-)
Haha thanks for the insight
Thanks for your comment helped me heaps
I'm researching getting into archery and always loved the aesthetics of horsebows. This video and comment have been very informative for me thanks.
@@ArminHirmer hi Armin and thanks for your hard works of inspiration motivation and teaching. I've recently got into arching and would really appreciate it if you could tell me what was the last bow you tried and recommended please? Many thanks 😎🙏🏹
@@ArminHirmer update? Are you at like 60lb draw yet ?
Excellent tutorial very nice! All beginners should see this video 1st!
I wish I had lmao I just got a 60lb bow cause I thought with what I can lift 60lbs would be easy but even though I can just about draw it to full draw every time holding it there for 10 seconds without shaking after 5 or 6 is not gonna happen
Howdy from Corpus Christi Texas. Outstanding video 👍 👍 thank you
I think you are the best of all. You are a very good teacher. thank you for your all excellent videos. Best regards from Turkey.
Thank you
Thanks for the reality check, its way to easy to let our egos get the better of us
Love his character.,,,
25 years ago I used a 60 pound compound bow, now I want to start shooting again but I can't draw it anymore haha, I will buy a modern adjustable bow instead, was looking at the Bear Archery Legend XR, very adjustable and a good price.
Thank you for this video. After almost 20 years of taekwondo my knees said: no more high jumps and I was introduced to archery and will start with next month. Dreaming of a longbow or flatbow (which I learn this is what I mean) since childhood I will try one with 62 inches and 25 lb/ pretty enough for me I guess (f, 57 y old, in pretty good condition).
I hope the martial arts training for many years will help to adapt to the techniques in archery but I also learned:“do“ is my personal way.
Thanks so much for the great videos and how you move looks great. You definitely met the wood in the cycle of stages a second time ☺️
Deine Videos sind einfach Klasse. Ich hab so viel von dir gelernt. Danke. Danke. Mag das alles zu dir zurück kommen ...
Great help and making the video in a satirical way is perfect for my sense of humor!
London calling!his advice is 100% accurate.very knowledgeable man
Thank you
Amazing content! Flash back 3 years ago. Accidentally saw some videos on archery and after several months watching archery videos, I convinced myself (and my wife) to buy one. I bought a standard recurve in an archery shop; a Cartel Sirius Plus set. Tested several limbs with different draw weights. They gave me 30-ish limbs to start. Felt miserable draw! I kept asking for lower draw weight. I never learned archery before and I'm not that fit. I also have back pain so have to be extra careful. Finally settled with 20 pounds bow. They said it was too light for me and I will need heavier weight soon. I said no, this is the draw weight I feel comfortable to start with. Start training right away. Man, I was struggling even with 20 pounds bow. I even stopped training for a while due to the shoulder pain. After that, I only shoot occasionally. So most of times my bow just collecting dust. Fast forward current time. For the last few months, I trained regularly together with my son. This morning, I shot 111 arrows; from 5 meter, 10 rounds, 11 arrows per round, less than 30 minutes. Same old bow, 20 pounds. Tight grouping, no missed target area. So relax, so much FUN! Now, I finally feel ready to try heavier limbs. Thinking of buying 26 or 28 pounds Sirius Plus limbs.
This video (together with Nu Sensei video on choosing the right draw weight) are the one that I watched 3 years ago. Guided me, to start with lower draw weight. I thank you, Sir. You have made my archery journey enjoyable. :)
I started with a 50ib bow just because it's what i had. I didn't have money for a new bow when I was younger but I eventually got good with it at about 50-60 ft out. It required more practice and shorter practice sessions which in turn probably slowed down my technique learning though.
I'm a 110 pound woman. My aunt who has been playing archery for like 20 years and has kids that play archery even on horseback says that I can start with 30 lbs or 27 lbs. My archery club leader said not to but I ended up buying the 27 lbs instead of the 25 lbs because my aunt said the quality of the 25 lbs bow wasn't good. I just hope I'll be okay with it when it arrives. My aunt started with 30 lbs but her body is much bigger than mine. It's not the end of the world for me right?
Is it okay to practice holding the bow in full draw 10 seconds a couple of times everyday but not release it as if I'm shooting an arrow?
1:41 basically doing this everyday, is it good practice?
@@naylisyazwina6836 as long as you don’t dry fire you shouldn’t have any problems with the limbs. But just remember that stretching your bow over and over reduces the elasticity of the material the limbs are made of. So it will cause wear on the bow no matter what but not as much as actual shooting. As for bow weight I don’t see a problem with picking any weight bow you want to shoot as strength is based on the individual and there really is no one bow weight that is universal for different sexes. It’s more or less how it felt to you and if you think you can shoot that comfortably for semi long periods of time. I would have said to try pulling your relatives bows back and see how some feel at different weights cause that’s the best way to tell the difference for you as an individual but that doesn’t matter since it sounds like you already ordered it. If it is to heavy for you to shoot for say an hour then shoot for 45 minutes or something like that to reduce wear on your body. Either way your gonna need to practice shooting your bow. Also if your talking about compound bows you can’t really try theirs as it is sized to you.
@@kylecaraway8662 I'm starting with traditional bow, like the one in the video I think. My aunt are a long way from where I am at. The video from this guy and other websites all say that it would be good for women to start with 20 - 25 lbs and men start at 30. I actually have pretty weak arms. Maybe I should have bought the Archery Exerciser Trainer Puller Arm Strength Trainer thing as well but kinda too late now
I can't remember if the bow I tried at my club was 23, 25, or 27 lbs, really can't remember. But I def wouldn't be able to shoot 45 minutes the first few times. Maybe like 15 minutes. I could message the president again and ask what poundage that bow was. Oh yeah I have club activities twice a week starting next week, the other days I would have to just practice on full drawing the bow every 10 seconds or something. I heard some stretches with dumbbells help but I don't have any
@@kylecaraway8662 and do you think there should be 1 day or 2 days in a week where the bow should rest without any pulling or it's fine for it to be used everyday? And yeah I won't dry fire it
@@naylisyazwina6836 it’s fine to use everyday or ever other whatever you want. You just have to remember that wear will occur and you will have to get a new bow eventually. It could be decades or years it depends on the quality of the bow. All in all if you get into it you’ll probably want more then one bow anyways so I wouldn’t worry to much about the wear.
So true, most people go right out and over pound them self. Very good information. Another great video.
I had to start at 40 just because of hunting laws where I live. I was accurate from day one though. I was told its its hard to be accurate with a bow. Just had to play around for about 5 minutes then I found where hold. Ive gone to a compound bow now just for the bow and range advantage but my recurve is still fun to play with every once and while.
I'm surprised nobody mentions exercise bands. They are sold in sets for $15 and include 15, 20, 25 lbs and pull from 12"-35". I use them to warm up my archery muscles but they are also handy for the draw weight test.
I did a extra video about them :)
Great advice to start of write, get good form, have fun, look good doing it. :)
I have been trying to decide on this for days now thank you very much you answered and made my decision for me in 3 minutes and 45 seconds so I have subscribed and I look forward to seeing more.
Your content is great ... Live long and keep posting
perfect. everything I needed. good job 👏👏👏
A great vidéo again with so much great and good informations. Thx
Just got my first bow (an X7 Blitzwolf/Thunderwolf / Junxing) 30lbs and despite having slight difficulties doing a full draw yet (getting there with practice) I'm honestly relieved that 30lbs is an ideal starting point even for a noodle like me at times.
Thanks!
Excellent video. Right after I got my first "horsebow" (for lack of a better word), I decided I wanted to try thumb release. Unfortunately, while it's draw weight is just fine for me with Mediterranean, it's far too heavy with thumb. Soon after, I got a 30# Alibow Turkish fiberglass bow to practice thumb release with, and it's really helping (and since even my lightest arrows are too heavy and stiff for it, your advice on khatra form helped immensely with that as well). Currently, I'm considering getting a couple more thumb rings, to see if there's another type I prefer.
I would say draw weight depends a lot on your personal attributes. I am a beginner and I took recurve bow with 38#. I am tall and I am pulling to 30` so my actual draw weight is even bigger and... it is not a problem at all to me. At Saturday I shoot more than 200 arrows and I stopped because lack of time not because I was fatigue. So best advice is exactly taken from video - just grab a bow in nearest store and try which draw weight is best for you.
How much do you weigh?
@@ultranium7414 I am big guy with more than 110 kg. And not all of it is fat :) basicly if you are doing body weight exercise like pull ups or body row you will pull bow with ease
I will say that being a massage therapist made my thumbs insanely strong, so shooting thumb is easier for me inherently than three fingers. I've done it a few years, otherwise, it'd be starting from scratch. Based on watching you perfect technique should stem from the lats and rhomboids in the back. Can just look at Bruce Lee's back for a good visual, lol. Most of us have strong rhomboids from typing, etc, but lats are underused so focusing there will help the most with assisting the drawing arm.
Very useful till this day !
The Cool Zen Master more like it...wish there was someone like this out here..but alas it's a snob a torium...thank you Sensei..👍
Thanks Armin
Thank you, good sir.
Great video, thank you .
Excellent video! I’m 67 years old in average physical condition and I’m getting ready to start my first archery lessons. This video really helped me to choose the right bow weight. Well done. I have a 29.5 inch draw length so for my first bow I plan to buy a 60” Black Hunter recurve or 62” Black Hunter hybrid longbow with a 25-30 lb. draw weight. I would love to get your opinion on this.
hi! how tall are you? i'm 1.83cm and my pull is @29"-30", black hunter also looks like a good alternative for me, although the size is small for my height, do you think I can break it with my draw length? In the website it appears that the arc is @ 28 "(the seller told me that it supports a maximum of 30")
I shoot a 55 pound bow as my first bow and didn’t have many problems. I’m 16 but 6’4ish but I do believe everyone is different.
Great video!
thank you
Incredibly helpful thank you.
I'm starting with a 50, wish me luck lol.
Haven't shot much, did use a long bow few years back, maybe it was 40lbs. Didn't be to much trouble, may need leather finger straps though
Great videos, thanks!
Thanks for the info!
I just got myself a 45lb bow, I've done archery before, and I climb, so I have a strong back, etc etc. I can draw it and I can shoot it, but this is just not ideal for me to practice, my fingers are in pain every time I draw it hahahahaha, plus no matter how much I climb, my shoulders are so weak, so I can't hold my draw for long.
So now after watching this video I'm getting a 25Lb bow so that I can be more comfy and focus on technique. Thank you!
Ous! Thank you!
Very helpful
I wish I had watched this video before I went out and bought a 50# recurve.
How is it going now mines is coming in the mail 😭😭😭😭
@David Munir The archery shop would be a good place to ask this question
@David Munir They can check a lot of things..your pull length...if 50# is right for you..or you can do what i did...and just buy the 50#...but then i got the 30#...whichwas way better for me.
@David Munir I went for a 40# long bow and it's not to bad. 30 would of been a better choice though.
@David Munir Yes
A good watch!
Thank you for the insight! Now I know more.
Thank You 😊
About a month ago I bought my first bow it's a fiberglass horsebow with 35 lbs draw weight and after a month practice now I buy another bow but with 27 lbs draw weight to practice my form 😀
A common beginner mistakes
This Video is pure gold. Thanks a lot.
Perfect, thank you!
That’s for the help from this video
very practical tips
Sage advice, Armin, as usual.
Flaxen Saxon
In your room, practice drawing the heavy one with proper form. Good repetitions. Start with 3 sets of 5. Then eventually you will get stronger.
I wish I knew this when I started with a 40lb bow and got injured. I just got a 20lb bow and am much happier!
Excellent, thank you
The weekly 3min videos are great and always helpful. I've been really getting into stump shooting (not strictly stumps) and working up in draw weight. Anyone know at what draw weight stump shooting starts to really destroy arrows (if I stick to 10gpp)?
Fine
This was very helpful! Thank you!
lol that was funny and informative
Thanks for this Video.
very nice video, thank you
excellent advise, thank you
so helpful, thank you!
Great information
Very helpful. Subscribed just got the "don't do it" vibe
Very informative thanks, and this guy is hilarious :)
Im able to shoot for a few hours easy with my 45lb recurve and am in the market for a long bow thinking 50lb maybe
Hello sir from Canada. What would be the model of the last bow you showed, 30 lbs mongolian style ?
New camera? I like the way this one focuses.
Sony and a good lens :)
Lots of useful information and advice.
What is the Horsebow called and where do i buy it?😊
Thank you. This just saved my muscles.
hi armin, excellent video as always. i really like the style of the horese bow u use in this video, which one is it please?
i bought a 50ibs as my first recurve and its being shipped. kinda got me nervous now. may have to do alot of strength training haha. wish me luck
Good luck :)
I am watching this after ordering a 50lb recurve off Amazon for my first bow 😬, I am quite strong so I’m still going to attempt to learn a good form and technique and get in a ton of practice with it. It’s been done before, I’m up for a challenge and I might even get a decent workout too. Feel free to ridicule me but I just spent a fat chunk of my money on it and I know for a fact that it is a good bow.
Cheers for the heart, you’re videos are really informative and genuinely entertaining
@@BleachCuresBlindness how's it going with the bow now that it's been a couple months
@@user-vf2zy6fl1d it’s going great actually, aside from the fact that I’ve broken about 30+ cheap arrows, fibreglass and carbon. because they go right through my foam targets and into or through my hardwood fence. I ended up buying a cheaper 30lb bow from the same brand before the 50lb came and after a couple of days of practicing I switched to the 50 and never used it again so I gave it to a mate, mostly because i find it far more accurate and easier to land tight groups but also because the 30 lb just isn’t as explosive and fun to shoot. I only just recently got some sweet gloves and I’m quite confident with the 50lb now that I don’t rip up my fingers anymore . I haven’t shot it in a couple weeks though as I’ve been busy but the last time I picked it up I hit four headshots consecutively from 15 metres and can reliably hit body shots from about 30 metres (like 90ft) if I’ve got my contacts in and It’s not too windy, though I’ll often shoot from the same marked spot which makes it easier. I’ve shot a couple wild turkeys and wiped out some invasive cane toads in the bush near me though I can’t help but think a 50 pound recurve bow was a bit of overkill for that kinda thing 😂. As the arrows would fly right though them never to be seen again. All in all I’m definitely enjoying archery as it’s very engaging and fun showing friends how to shoot and I’m glad I got the 50lb because of how fun that thing is, only complaint is it can start to strain your centre back muscles at first but now I’ll only start to get sore after about an hour of target shooting. I’m going to look into getting some actual sights for it sometime soon and go hog shooting once I can reliably hit my headshots from a bit further away, also going to need some stronger arrows with broadheads and fluorescent fletching. Would be happy to hear any recommendations.
Wow! Great video! I recently purchased a #15 compound bow for my 7 year old son. Hes having trouble drawing it back. Any suggestions on a bow that might fit him better? I'm not seeing a lot of youth bows that have lighter draw weights online.
Where can i buy the bow you showed at 0:18 . Im looking for one that looks exactly like that
Instead of pulling the arrow/bowstring back is there a legitimate technique to push the bow out? I find that for some reason this much easier on my body.
am 15 and i dont think am weak. I bought a 40lb bow and it hasnt come yet. ver excited.
Enjoy
@@ArminHirmer Thabks
Why can't I type today
My husband's bow is 50lbs and I can pull it, but I think I'll go with a 35lb bow because of this video. :) My compound bow is heavier than that but it's a compound bow lol.