Just in case you weren’t feeling old enough today…
Consider that the young archers who are starting college this year were born in 1991.
That, by the way, is nearly 90 years after Fred Bear was born.
Those college freshman are likely too young to know the names Nels Grumley, Charley Kroll or even Frank Scott.
Their lifetime has always included bows with cables and cams.
The Bear Razorhead was introduced 35 years before they took their first breath.
The all-phenolic Super Kodiak burst onto the archery scene 42 years before they graduated from high school.
The vaulted 1959 Bear Kodiak appeared and was then was gone nearly five decades before they became teenagers
They have always had Cabela’s.
Strangely enough, they think a Static Recurve is a rock group, Glen St. Charles is a blues singer and Grayling refers to a fish.
For them, arrow shafts are carbon, and almost always have been.
They’ve never used a bowstringer, and are pretty sure that the step-through method is a dance move.
They also believe that a KII is a mountain in the Himalayas.
The bottom line is that these kids mostly never walked down a wooded lane carpeted with fallen oak and maple leaves and thought about a man in a Borsalino hat.
I’d say that they’re all damn lucky to have guys like Case, Parker, Eccleston, Reader, Whiffen, Phillips, Dickerson, Hopkins and so many others who have worked so hard to collect and preserve the history and artifacts of archery and bowhunting.
Just maybe they’ll learn in college that to fully understand and appreciate where things are today, they must dive into the past.
But in the mean time, these whippersnappers – including my own grown kids who keep wondering what all these old bows and backquivers are on the walls - are making me feel decidedly old.
This TradGang forum, thankfully, is making me feel younger or at least useful.
How about you?
Bill Krenz
Colorado