….wooden arrows. From reading the thread on wooden bows and wooden arrows which showed a particular fondness for arrows of the wooden variety, especially when made from shaft to sanded, smoothed, straightened, sealed and fletched arrows that are not only our tools, but also, from what I have seen, works of art. So I, being an interested new-b, wanted to give them a try before buying more and more carbon shafts. I ordered a “Ready to Shoot” set of 45-50#(11/32) spine arrows, cut 28.5” and a 125 field point added. Nothing fancy, just fletched 3 and sealed. They were received quickly and in a bombproof box that revealed an utterly beautiful set of plane Jane arrows. I was so excited, I grabbed my Black Hunter Recurve and 6 of these arrows and had quite an experience. The bow seemed more “fluid” if that makes sense, and when I did my job, these arrows did theirs so, so well. They fly straight, dart like, even when shooting side by side a set of tuned carbons. Now I have a dozen bare shafts in my basket and want to try building up a set, but now, a couple of questions. After shooting, since I skipped this step, I brought the arrows to my bench and spun them, all had various degrees of not being straight, wobbles, etc. First, can I get a roller and straighten already fletched arrows? Second, how did these arrows fly so darn straight when they are not straight? Repeat, they flew as straight as a carbon (straightness @ .006 arrow) tuned to my bow. Now I am not so experienced to need tuned arrows and I take longer than usual as I know my routine is not “spot on, but can generally tell when it can count. At 25 yards and closer, 25 being the rare and extreme, is complete spin straightness required and can it be attained on a wooden arrow and at what exchange rate, ie, 1 out of 5 will not straighten?
That all aside, I can’t wait for it to warm a bit to go shoot these things again.