Archery is
a Lifelong Sport Indeed
By Tony Kuehn © 2006 
Honour to the
old bow-string,
Honour to the bugle horn,
Honour to the woods unshorn,
Honour to the Lincoln Green
Honour to the archers keen.
These lines appeared
on the title page of the programme for the VIIIth International
Archery Tournament held in London in 1938. Recently I used
them as inspiration for my teammates for 3-D league who
consisted of my brother, nephew and a new friend from the
local archery shop. However, I changed the spelling of the
last word to Kuehn (as it is properly pronounced-per my
ancestors.). This saying is very close to the words of Frank
Forester in his 1849 book entitled: “The Deer Stalkers.”
It is basically a toast to all hunters.
Well, “team
Kuehn” did pretty well during 3-D leagues this year.
We won our league and it’s the only first place trophy
I have acquired- in any athletic event, and I have competed
in many sports. It was the second “first place”
trophy for another teammate who went 25 years without one,
a year before the other guys were born. Also was a nice
addition to my nephew’s collection of a few dozen
trophies from his days shooting as a child and young teenager.
Our team consisted of a 50 and 45 year old and two guys
in their early to mid-twenties. The equipment consisted
of an old Bear Code, Mathews Conquest 3, Hoyt-Reflex Caribou
II and a brand new BoTech with a mix of carbon and aluminum
arrows. We shot a mix of release and fingers.
As I think of
the recent activity with the range grants, NASP program,
State MSAA indoor championships and the push get more archers
in the field by the DNR, I recall my early days as an archer.
It started when I was very young. We made our own bows back
then or got an old used fiberglass bow at a garage sale.
The arrows were also homemade or bought with our candy money
at the local hardware store. We practiced at the range and
in our yards shooting boxes full of rags (Thanks to the
Zwickey judo point). Sometimes with unexpected results.
Such as the time my older sister shot her arrow through
the stack of storm windows or when my brother hit the bottom
of Dad’s boat while in storage and put a hole in it.
My brother bounced another one off of his expensive muscle
car’s paint job. Probably better to have kids shoot
at a range designed for such a purpose. We did that too
and few family members shot competitively and received some
trophies. We also built some recurve bows in shop class,
and even a compound from a Bear kit, but times have changed,
or have they?
Drive through
your semi-urban neighborhoods and count how many 3-D, foam
block or other targets you see outside in the yard. Whether
safe, legal or not, people want a place to shoot. While
a number of ranges have closed outdoors, there still are
a number of good places to shoot inside. Minnesota has some
really nice club facilities that are a nice break when the
indoor ranges at the local archery shop or the big retailers
get crowded. When you can’t shoot they even have archery
tournaments on ESPN occasionally. If you watch the competition
it’s not just the youngest archers who do well. I
think I even saw a considerable “deer gut” on
one of the leading shooters. My point is that the modern
equipment being what it is, allows just about anyone of
any size and athletic ability to shoot reasonably well,
at least well enough to have a good time and enjoy the sport.
Plenty of used stuff out there too if you can’t afford
the new top of the line equipment. You local archery shop
may even sell some or have a bulletin board for their customers.
I have also seen many bows at pawn shops, garage sales and
even in the clearance rack of large department stores. If
you want the traditional stuff and have the strength and
skill to shoot that well, make you r own arrows, etc. the
opportunity exists too. I wouldn’t suggest shooting
the really old stuff as it may have significant value or
actually be dangerous to shoot. Look for cracks and obvious
signs of damage and if present, don’t shoot it.
You can tinker
with different types of bows and have plenty of fun with
it. After 40 years or so, I know I do. We are lucky that
archery has survived under a changing social environment;
hopefully I will be able to participate as long as I want
to. If my kids pick up the sport I hope to be watching them
am perhaps some grandchildren after that. They show a lot
of interest right now and that makes this archer very happy.
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