Originally posted by capt eddie:
After watching the videos of Terry Green shooting I question the straight arm draw. I have read that the longbow is ment to be shot with a bent arm at the elbow.Is this true? I notice that the bow is R/D, Does that make a differance? I need help to asssure that I have the basics down correctly. Your help would be great.
I haven't seen the video, my 'net connection is too slow for uploading videos... But I do know that sometimes when an arm is ever-so-slightly bent, it appears to be ram-rod straight -- and Mr. Green's arms look big enough to add to such an appearance.
Put all of your weight on your bow-arm while leaning against a door frame (grab the frame as though you were holding your bow). Make sure your arm is straight with the elbow locked... Notice how the elbow joint kind of wants to "rotate" so that the bottom is in and the top is out? Feel any strain in the elbow joint itself? Now relax your elbow a bit and see what happens... When you put all that pressure on the elbow, keeping it locked like that, you also put a lot of strain on the joint -- and you risk wrecking the joint. By locking the elbow, you also increase the chances of the bowstring giving you huge welts on your arm (even the best arm-guard won't stop every string-slap). Some people do need to lock their elbow to be a good archer, but it is not recommended.
Besides, by bending the elbow a little bit, your arm can act like a shock-absorber and it really does make it easier to control the bow. The only real difference in handling a longbow versus a recurve that I have ever noticed (I'm not an expert, and I do not claim to know everything - but I have learned more than some) is in how you hold it: A straight wrist versus a "broken" wrist. It has to do more with the shape of the bowgrip than the type of bow.
I hope that some of this helps.