When you're throwing baseballs through tires, do you just count the times it goes in the hole, or do you also count the times it hits the tire and do you count when it misses the tire too?
Doesn't the glove also come to the ball, or have I just been seeing things?
If ball throwing is instinctive, does that mean that all arms are equal?
If one doesn't have particularly well developed eyesight and hand/eye coordination, can one acquire it by becoming the ball?
What about all those Trad folks in the beachers that didn't make the ball team? Can they awaken latent subconscious shooting talent by emulating the various trick shooting authors?
I think not.
On the other hand, if you first learn form (how to shoot the bow) and then learn gap, shots in the field will become automatic. Adjustments will be made quickly, unconsciously and you stand a good chance of punching your tag with regularity.
An interesting thing about the gap/split vision aiming method is that once the talent is acquired, it doesn't take shooting a bunch arrows on a daily basis to keep it honed, but it does require a precise range estimating system. That may be what a lot of folks stub their toes on. Acquiring a reliable and laser quick method of estimating yardage takes a lot of diligence. A gap shooter can start cold and if he has a good idea of the yardage, the first arrow will strike within inches of where he wants it to.
One of my favorite things to do now, when I can't be hunting, is to shoot my recurve with compounders. I dearly love to walk up to a line of c-bow shooters, pick an arbitrary target butt, say 50 yards, sink an arrow into the bull and then shoot the 35, 20, 25, etc, with similar results and with no warm up. Suddenly, thanks to ingrained shooting form and gap aiming, I'll find myself the center of an admiring circle of guys whose curiosity and respect I have aroused with my marksmanship. I usually offer them the opportunity to shoot my bow, but as a rule, there are no takers. In the days before I learned to gap there was no way that I could do that. I focused on a spot and hoped to God that the angle was right, but I really didn't know for sure until after the arrow was loosed. If the first arrow missed, I'd make an adjustment and the second arrow usually was a lot better. Any of you guys know that feeling?
Gap aiming, once mastered, is there to serve you and it doesn't take hours and hours of diligent practice to maintain it.
This year I hunted elk 18 days straight and didn't shoot an arrow until I shot my bull at 31 yards. Last year was about the same number of days, only it was 22 yards. I'm so focused on hunting, there's no time for practice, but with the gap method, there's no need to keep the edge accutely honed, nor do I need to be within 10 paces in order to be confident. Give me a break, even Tred Barta can kill moose at 6 paces...lol!
That's all I know.