I don't know what it is about them, but for some reason, it seems to be the bow I shoot the best with. It doesn't really matter what year. I started traditional archery about a year and a half ago with a new Grizzly, even though I liked the older bows....because I didn't know about what to look for in an older bow, so I went new. Then I bought a 1964 zebrawood grizz. as I learned about bows. Since that time, I've gotten addicted to bows and have bought several higher up models and my 2 grizzly's have hung on the rack. My first grizz I bought hadn't been shot since July.
I've gone up in length to longer recurves hoping it would help my shooting. The last month, I've been shooting a longbow on the ground exclusivly and then tried target practicing out of a stand with the longbow....not pretty. Didn't want to end my evenings practice on bad shots, I took my grizzly off the rack and shot it off the stand, at least ten shots at 15 yards with tight 1 inch groups. After the longbow, my 45# grizzly seemed extra faster than I remembered. that was the best I've ever shot.
I guess I bought into them being beginners bows and not long enough etc. I don't know if it's because it was the first bow style I started with or the 58 inch length or what, but they just feel right. I wish I would have just stayed with the Grizzly model from the beginning as far as my shooting is concerned. For the record, I have never shot a 59' Kodiak
Now for a question, the main thing I hunt is a Whitetail Deer. The legal lbs in my state is 40lb, and my Grizzly is 45#, so I know it's enough, but would there be any significant benefit in going up to a 50# bow? Is 45# all I would ever need and would the 5# extra weight have much more benefits in penatration?
Thanks