Finally the real view of the session, with warmup 🙂 I also need to pressure myself to do it (btw I also do stretching and wind-down afterwards, if drawing heavier). But it is absolutely important! When you are showing it, you are normalizing it - that is good.
Question, have ypu ever tried using a thumb ring as an arrow rest? Shooting with both hands it may be beneficial. Its something I do regularly now. It does take a couple changes with your bow hand. When you use the ring as a rest, spin it to the back of ur thumb, and use a high thumb position, not a low position. Then grip the bow with a loose grip on the thumb so when you fire, the ring doesn't grind into the bow. Once you get used to it it works fabulously. Depending on the ring choice. Not all rings work for it. But most do. It not only makes a good rest, it makes it so you can have any arrow position you end up with, and you never get knicked again. Also Armin just pit out a vid talking about balance that may help you keep straight. ruclips.net/user/shortsnnBVOzeeP38?si=fL31QXHpCNFOB2pK
I have never done it. Btw I am using just a thumb protector. I am planning to buy a Korean thumbing. Will see if your suggestion is working with it. Thank you! That Armin video is great. Very good idea. Thank you! 🙏🙂
Finally the real view of the session, with warmup 🙂
I also need to pressure myself to do it (btw I also do stretching and wind-down afterwards, if drawing heavier).
But it is absolutely important! When you are showing it, you are normalizing it - that is good.
Thank you and you are absolutely right. No matter is if you have injury or not warm up is a must. Without one an injury is inevitable...
Whats your nocking point like?
You shouldn't feel the arrows at all. No contact.
Oh and great shooting. You have found your way with this bow.
Oh just seen session 3. Yes. Try the balancing technique to find the nock point.
@@KTBIOM Yes. I should install a nocking point. Thank you!
Question, have ypu ever tried using a thumb ring as an arrow rest?
Shooting with both hands it may be beneficial.
Its something I do regularly now. It does take a couple changes with your bow hand. When you use the ring as a rest, spin it to the back of ur thumb, and use a high thumb position, not a low position. Then grip the bow with a loose grip on the thumb so when you fire, the ring doesn't grind into the bow.
Once you get used to it it works fabulously. Depending on the ring choice. Not all rings work for it. But most do. It not only makes a good rest, it makes it so you can have any arrow position you end up with, and you never get knicked again.
Also Armin just pit out a vid talking about balance that may help you keep straight.
ruclips.net/user/shortsnnBVOzeeP38?si=fL31QXHpCNFOB2pK
I have never done it. Btw I am using just a thumb protector. I am planning to buy a Korean thumbing. Will see if your suggestion is working with it. Thank you!
That Armin video is great. Very good idea. Thank you!
🙏🙂