I had to bring this little beauty back up again with a story to go along with it.We had some friends over last night for dinner.Hardly ever get to see them with me working afternoons it's hard to get together with most people on a normal schedule.But since I'm off work for a couple of weeks we invited them over.Just the mom and son came,he's 15.The sad part is that he just lost his dad to cancer two months ago.He was a great guy and a good friend.
After dinner,we had a little while before dark so I asked him(Steven) if he wanted to try shooting a bow.He said sure.So I went to the bowroom and got down this beautiful little 35# '59 Kodiak and strung it up for the first time.The limbs were perfectly straight.I set the nock point,grabbed some arrows and found a shooting glove to fit him.This was exactly the reason I bought this bow.I thought it would be perfect for a youngster or woman that might want to try shooting a bow.Most of my bows are 45-55#.Nothing worse than over-bowing someone right out of the gate.
At first Steven was a little awkward.Arrow coming off the shelf while drawing,not pulling back far enough,no anchor point at all.Grip too tight,etc..We didn't have much time before dark and the mosquitoes were getting hungry.I was trying to give him a crash course on shooting without overloading him with too much information.I thought maybe the 35# was still too heavy for him.After a few missed shots,Steven started pulling with his back muscles more and started anchoring his shooting hand.Loosened up on his grip,kept his bowhand up,canted the bow,both eyes open.Within less than 1/2 hour he was hitting the McKenzie deer target regularly with even a few kill shots and nice groups.His mom was outside watching him shoot and was eventually in tears and told my wife that was what Steven needed since his dad passed away.It's just him,his mom,and his sister.At 15 years old,a boy needs a guy around for "guy stuff".
It started getting dark so we brought the bow in but Steven said he really enjoyed shooting and would like to maybe go to a traditional archery shoot with my son and I if we went.I was just amazed at how quickly Steven caught on and was shooting really good in such a short amount of time.Once he got over the hump he was pulling the bow back to full draw with no problem.
I couldn't help but think of that picture of Fred Bear in a couple of the late 1960's catalogs where he's showing a very young blonde headed boy how to shoot a bow.The same scenario was being lived out here yet again some 40 years later.Different players but so similar.This is so much of what Fred Bear ws all about,carrying on the tradition and getting as many people interested in the bow as possible.
Sorry for the long rambling,but it really was heart warming to me see a young boy that just lost his dad,laughing and enjoying something so simple as a bow and arrow.I never expected a 35# 50 year old bow to bring so much joy to not only myself but another youngster that doesn't even know who Fred Bear is.