#26,000 in Books
Use arrows to jump to the previous/next product

Reddit mentions of Archery Anatomy: An Introduction to Techniques for Improved Performance

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 2

We found 2 Reddit mentions of Archery Anatomy: An Introduction to Techniques for Improved Performance. Here are the top ones.

Archery Anatomy: An Introduction to Techniques for Improved Performance
Buying options
View on Amazon.com
or
    Features:
  • Souvenir Press
Specs:
Height0.56 Inches
Length10.21 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateSeptember 1995
Weight0.881849048 Pounds
Width7.23 Inches

idea-bulb Interested in what Redditors like? Check out our Shuffle feature

Shuffle: random products popular on Reddit

Found 2 comments on Archery Anatomy: An Introduction to Techniques for Improved Performance:

u/WillAdams ยท 2 pointsr/Archery

For a good explanation of the underlying physiology for why this is as described, see the book Archery Anatomy: An Introduction to Techniques for Improved Performance by Ray Axford

u/3fingeredjack ยท 2 pointsr/Archery

For some basic info, check out the getting started guide in the sidebar.

What style of bow you get will be mostly guided by what kind of bow you are drawn to (and also what you plan on doing with it). There are some decent bows in the 100-150 price range (at least in a recurve or longbow). You should probably plan on 6-12 arrows to start off with (along with a few other necessary items). Arrows can be anywhere from $5 US each on up (arrows can be found cheaper, but quality might suffer).

As for learning on your own, /u/nusensei has a good youtube channel, not sure how many videos he has on technique, but good info. Archery Great Britain had some coaching videos online, you could search youtube for those as well, I think they go at least a little into technique but might be more tuned to coaches and not the archer.

KSLInternationals website has some good info on shooting.

You can also find some good books on archery, the only one I have read is Archery Anatomy, maybe other folks here could recommend other useful books.

Bottom line is, as with any other skill, teaching yourself will likely be more difficult than if you have a teacher, but you you don't have access to one than lots of reading and watching.