As you can see I high lighted the "shooting" because this is not about aiming,,,it's about shooting.
I have a buddy I met 3 years ago when I changed jobs.
He walked into our smoko room one day carrying a compound bow he'd just got ripped off on,,,although he didn't know that at the time,he just wanted to get into bow hunting and a shop had sold him a seconud hand bow that didn't fit him,had the wrong arrows and was two weeks away from blowing up.
Anyway,the minite I was all this.I had a new friend to lend a guiding hand to.
He thought I was nuts for shooting an old recurve "hey the thing was brand new thank you very much"
Well he saw my collection of hunting pic's an then took to a property he had access to due to his family conections,which is about the only way you get on to most of the places in the area we live in.
While out there he saw me take a fallow doe at a distance he couldn't match with his soon to blow compound,an the penny dropped.
I helped him choose an buy an old Bear tigercat an gave him some very basic instruction.
I could see him turn off as soon as I started to get tech on him,so I just left it at that an started taking him to my club each Sunday.
It wasn't long before he was closing in on me at the sunday shoots and then last year he won our 3D masters competition.
Today if you asked him how he aimed,he couldn't tell you,if you asked him how he holds his bow,he would say "like this" an show you,if you asked why he shoots those arrows,he would point at me an say,ask him!
He doesn't want to know what constitutes a good release,he doesn't want to know the difference between instinctive aiming,gap shooting or any other form of aiming.
That man is an instinctive archer,he's a very good shot and he reminds me of what I was doing 40 years ago.
His name is Phillip Dickie,he's the current NZ 3D recurve masters champion,he's an instinctive archer,,,and he's my mate.