Terry mentioned ramping up the posts and chiming in ......... so here's one that I've been thinking about, not just now or recently, but for years! It has the potential to get all sorts of things stirred up and maybe go down the rabbit hole ......we'll see
So ....... unfortunately for me I suppose, other than my younger brother who I don't get to shoot with as often as I'd like, I don't shoot with anybody! Don't have any stick bow insane buddies, don't make it to many shoots so my opportunities to observe anything other than what I'm doing myself, are pretty much non existent. This is not something to be taken lightly, from a learning / teaching aspect. You can learn so much or teach so much, shooting with others. Many times, you don't even know the degree of the knowledge you are gaining by simply observing something. It can have that "greater than the sum of it's parts" effect and hone your knowledge base in leaps and bounds ..........
Getting to the main topic here ......... I know what accuracy looks like to me. I know what an acceptable level of shooting accuracy is to let me know I'm doing the right things, my fundamentals are sound, I have consistency, I can make ethical shots on game at a given range with confidence. But, over the years I have gathered mostly from reading and a fair amount of observing as well I suppose, that this is somewhat relative to the shooter and not a absolute thing. What I think is accurate may not be good enough for someone else. Or, someone might think that I shoot rather well, but I may not be satisfied with my own accuracy during any instance.
We can all agree I would think, that if we would could stack arrows on top of each other at any distance during any situation and in any conditions, that would be the apex of accuracy.
To some, accuracy is a group of arrows that will fit into a softball size at 15 yards
To some, all arrows touching, but at the same distance.......and they will not shoot past that on targets or game.
Some wreck a lot of arrows if they aren't shooting 1 arrow per bullseye target, out to 40 plus yards .......and on and on.
I talk of targets here but obviously, I'm meaning game animals as well. I've never met or heard of anybody who became an impressively good shot and only ever loosed an arrow at live animals ......we gotta shoot targets to work on things.
So there is a thought to ponder and this is in no way meant to get a comparison going on who shoots better than who or anything like that, though I realize a chance of it bending that way
For what it's worth, the person who might not show up in the most accurate way on paper or foam but consistently harvest game outing after outing, is the person I put on the pedestal. Some can't shoot paper or foam too great, but can kill anything they even think about shooting at.......some are the opposite because shooting animals is something a lot different!
If you don't mind sharing an honest perspective on what accuracy looks like to you when you are on point and doing all the right things, lets have it!