lostarrow, you totally cleared that up, believe it or not... I was hoping to eventually have a quiver full of nice-shooting arrows and not have to worry about which I pull out, rose, ash, whatever... but it sounds like shoots of different woods can't hit the same spot without adjusting my "aim". As a newbie archer, that's all I need
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And thanks guys for the replies, and for having such a positive view of my skills! To tell you the truth, I am brand new at this, and when I practice I stand at about 10 yards, and the last set of arrows I back off to 20 yards for fun. Until I built these rose arrows, I was using over-spined aluminum shafts, which did OK, but never quite flew like these two do. I've been doing alot of searches all summer on form and everything, and just go by trial and error... I'd love to go to one of your guys' archery seminars or whatever and get some real instruction someday, but for now I'm having a ball just making my own stuff and playing! My goal this year is to have a few more nice arrows, and get good enough close-up to do some stump shooting... maybe a home-made 3D setup with some stuffed animals or something. I might never try to shoot deer with a bow, actually recently bought my dream Savage .243 for that, can't wait! Because I don't think I'll ever pull over 40 pounds. But I'd love to eventually shoot the bow for squirrels, grouse, woodchucks, or porcupines.
Donald, I just checked my arrows and the fletching is all correct.... although I did offset the fletches on a few of the arrows, because it seemed like the goose feathers lay better like that lol, but one of my two good arrows I messed up on the spacing some, and just about have room for a fourth feather! And that shaft is the most "crooket" too ... you guys are right, my little bow is very forgiving at ten yards
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I will try to sand down my few "heavy" rose shafts, and see if I can't get them to shoot better, I'd love to have 4 or 5 that shoot similarly. And once fall is here I'm back in the rose-thicket, and this time I know to select thicker stems, since most of the 100 or so I cut last winter were WAY too small.