I know most of you use the swing-draw technique when you shoot. I am in the minority of Hill shooters, because I aim before I ever draw the bow.
I learned that I had to do that on elk to keep from spooking them at point-blank range when I draw my bow, and I just stuck with that style of shooting for everything else. It's worked pretty well for me, but it's certainly not for everyone.
For those of you who are curious, the picture below shows what I see before I ever draw my bow. All the aiming is done before I draw.
I slowly ooze the bow into place. Then I pre-aim, which takes less than a second. After that, I simply wait until the time is right to take the shot (for the animal to turn more broadside or look away or something like that).
When the time is right. I draw straight back and shoot, which takes about two seconds. Sometimes on elk I have to hold for 10 seconds or more. I practice holding at full draw all summer long.
I don't think about the aiming because that part has already been done before I drew the string. I simply concentrate on maintaining back tension until the arrow has struck.
Then, and only then, do I stop squeezing my shoulder blades together. I have seen myself on video shoot animals and freeze at full draw for 15 yo 20 seconds after the shot. People think I do that for follow-through, but I am simply freezing in place so the animal doesn't see any movement to be afraid of. I don't move a muscle from the second the arrow launches until the animal is either out of sight or tips over.
For you guys who swing draw, do you get just about the same sight picture shown below when you are about half way drawn, or do you only get the arrow fully on target at full draw?