Welcome!
I would recommend you NOT start out with a new (pricey) recurve as it takes different muscles to shoot a trad bow, and what you can shoot well now may not be where you want to be a year from now. You will likely find a different draw length, anchor point and release method! You don't know what you want until you have tried it. There are many different grip structures (I like high grip, others despise them). Be a shame to have a $600 bow you don't need. Get a $150 used bow and then trade-it in or sell it for $150.
Find a good used bow of 45# and get a couple dozen arrows. Although that may be all the bow you ever need, if you do go up in weight you've got a back-up and maybe bow-fishing bow. I went up and now I'm headed back down.
I shot target recurves, got a compound for hunting, failed at it for two years, and it wasn't until I went back to a recurve (or up to a hunting weight recurve) and had spent hours shooting stumps in the woods that I started to kill deer. I thought I wanted an English style longbow,`` but it seems my brain is recurve oriented. That and my muscles aren't geared for a 100# pull!
Note that I shot a 70# (30% letoff) compound very well and a 55# recurve killed me. I had to go to 45# until I got the muscles figured out. I gradually got up to 68# and then had some
Give it time. Don't over do it starting out and HAVE FUN! It's better to shoot two arrows every day than 200 and practice a lot of poor form.