Thanks for the kind words, Biggie. I've been laying low for a while, but archery, and talking about it, keeps coming out. I got very tired of that other site, and I was pleased to find that this one has taken off.
"It's in him, and it's got to come out"- John Lee Hooker
"It's not some game I play, it's in my DNA, it's what I do"- Donald Fagen
That quotations thing in the signatures has me going, I guess.
Re the light vs heavy poundage, when I was a kid in the 1950's and 60's, a hunting bow was typically 40-45#, and tons of game were killed with them, mostly with cedar shafts tipped with Bear razorheads. I knew a guy who shot 60# back then, and all the other bowhunters around (there weren't that many 'cause there weren't many deer)were in awe of his prowess.
It wasn't until the compound came along and brought a whole bunch of new archers into the sport that folks began to think that they needed 60# or more to kill a deer. When I started the Superceder shaft business with Dan's help about 15 years ago, the average traditional archer shot 60# or more, because that's what they shot with the compound they'd learned on. Because of this, we designed our plant to make high-spined shafts that were practically unobtainable in the cedar that dominated the market. We also barrel-tapered them both for performance and so that we could use shafts with diameters greater than 23/64- there were no taper tools or points for anything larger. The heavy bows in vogue then really complicated our attempt to do business!
Fortunately, as a group we've wised up, and now the average is probably closer to 50, and as this thread illustrates, is coming down. That's a good thing. 40# from a modern efficient bow will kill anything on the continent. I'm living proof that those heavy bows will damage your body if you overdo it. I can't shoot nearly as much as I'd like to, now. Shoulders.
My first buck was taken with a 45# recurve. My next one will likely be in the same range.