Originally posted by Steertalker:
The speed at which one chooses to shoot is a personal thing. Some need more time to set things up; others don't. What's important is being in control of your shot. It's being able to choose to shoot or not shoot when all the parts of your shot are arranged and brought to order at anchor. Typically what snap shooting does is to trigger a release of the string....which is not good. It's counterpart in the firearms world is called flinching.
Brett
I am with Brett on this one. I recently posted this...
posted March 18, 2008 08:48 AM
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"I have been shooting about 3 years now and until 6 months ago I always released as soon as (and often before) I hit my anchor point. And I was shooting pretty good.
After posting a video of my form and receiving alot of good feedback, I decided to "retool" my form, drawing to achor and spending a second or two or three acquiring my target and then releasing. Let me tell you, things got MUCH worse than I thought possible and I was very tempted to go back to my previous style. But I stuck with it. Several months into the process, something changed.
Suddenly, the bow that I used to think was a bit heavy for me was fully under my control. I became much more aware of my anchor point, back tension and alignment. Once or twice each shooting session I was shooting 3" groups at 20 yards, which was unheard for me previously. Now I am shooting better than I ever have."
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... and it continues to improve.
Here's something to try. Get yourself a 30# bow. Take 10 - 20 shots shooting without holding, just get to anchor and let 'er fly. Now take that same bow and shoot 10 - 20 arrows while taking the time to hold and acquire your target before releasing. This is what convinced me that I needed to be holding longer. On average my groups were considerably smaller when holding 3-5 seconds.
For me, it was all about control and form. Some can do that without holding, but my guess is they are in the minority.
This of course is my experience and completely unencumbered by scientific evidence. ;-)