I have developed a series of arm exercises that I do in addition to the bow pulling exercises. If you decide you want to do them, you can substitute a light-weigh dumbbell for the weights on the Power Pull. At home, I just use the weight of the bow, which is about 3 pounds. The Power Pull plus weights is about 5 pounds. I don’t know that it matters much if there are weights on the Power Pull while you’re pulling it. If you wanted to, I suppose you could dangle the dumbbell from the Power Pull while you’re pulling it. It is convenient for me to have everything in one package when I’m traveling, which is why I got the Power Pull plus weights.
The exercises were developed to work the rotator cuff muscles, so it is not important to use a lot of weight. In fact, I wondered if the 5 pound Power Pull was too heavy, although I got used to it over the course of my 2 week trip to Mexico. The rotator cuffs are muscles used to rotate the shoulder, and tend to get weaker as we age. They are also the main cause of archery injuries. Normal weight lifting exercises don’t help them much, nor does pulling the bow.
I developed these exercises myself, but I ran them by my son in law, who is an orthopedic surgeon, who approved of what I was doing. For all of these exercises, the weight is held in the hand, just as you would hold the bow. The slower you move, the better the exercise will work. All exercises are done on both the right and left sides.
1. Raise your arm to the side, so it is parallel with the ground. Bend the arm at the elbow so the hand with the weight rotates in and touches the chest, and then back to the starting position. Do this at least 10 times, each side.
2. Same starting position as #1. Rotate your hand as far as possible in each direction (i.e. 180*) like the weight was an airplane propeller. Do at least 10 rotations, each side.
3. Same starting position. Rotate your hand in small circles, first clockwise, then counter-clockwise. Do at least 10 rotations, each direction, each side.
4. Same starting position. Lower your arm until your hand touches your leg, and then raise it back up again. Do at least 10 reps, each side.