It was 1986 and Gene Wensel was extolling the virtues of hunting with a recurve in prose and seminars, so I decided to get me one. Took my Martin Warthog down to the Bear dealer where I had purchased my first bow in '68 and traded it in on a Martin Take Down recurve, had the same Warthog B riser as the compound, just recurve limbs.
I never did try to shoot it instinctively, set it up like a compound;Hoyt Pro rest,Berger button, sights, sling and even a stabilizer
Hunted with it a couple years, even shot my only tournament with it the summer of '87,( 12th out of 120 shooters, the only stick, rest were shooting compounds.) Here's a pic of the first buck
Then in '88 I went back to the dark side.
Recieved Asbell's
Instinctive Shooting for Christmas of '99 and made my year 2000 resolution to learn how to shoot my recurve without all the stuff on it and go out and hunt that way.
This is were things get a little fuzzy. I wanted to shoot off the shelf.But I think the shelf was sloped down and out and wouldn't hold an arrow. So, I carefully took my Sawzall to it, flattened the shelf out, then glued and screwed a layer of luan plywood to that to raise the shelf up to the level of the plunger hole, because I thought that's were it HAD to be. Man, it was ugly.
I didn't have much time to hunt that fall, didn't kill anything, missed a doe I think.
G. Fred's a big advocate of having the arrow down on the bow hand, this thing was like an inch above. Out comes the Sawzall again. Off goes the shelf. And then I decided that sweet looking and shooting used Wes Wallace longbow on the rack at the local Trad shop was calling my name. The MTD went on the rack and hung there for 10 years.
A couple weeks ago I decided to see if I couldn't make her right. Some of you guys joke about BW's being plywood bows, well this thing was like a 2x6 bow, very thick and heavy. First I radiased the shelf. Then, because it was 3/4 of an inch wide, I ground her down to 3/8ths. When I had originally cut it down, I went too far, so I raised her back up with a heavy piece of tooling leather.
Where the limbs attach to the riser it was 1 3/4 inches wide and I thought, "What the heck", I can always use her for kindling. So I took her to the belt sander and took 1/8th off each side of the riser and the limbs. Then I had to taper the limbs out to the tips.
Sanded her smooth, put a coin in the plunger hole, rubbed in a few coats of poly, soft leather sideplate, calf hair on the shelf. Like a dummy, I never took any before pics, or weighed it, or scaled it for draw weight, or checked it's tiller.(Once I get something rollin...)
Shoots good, no speed demon.