this is something that develped over the years for me,, and I am just now able to put it into words,,,,
well I shoot alot of different size bows,, so have shot alot of different draw lengths,,,,
what I have found is if I have a draw weight that is comfortable,, I will default to that,, no matter what the bow lenght is,, say 50#,,
I have been shooting some shorter bows today,,and 50 is about all I can handle at the shorter draws,, well I am pulling to a weight more than a draw length or anchor,,,, I pull the bow back till if feels 50 ish,, and let it go,, I have no anchor at the shorter draws,, and for that style shooting it works well for me,, even at a short 20 inch draw,, at 15 yards ,,, with very little practice,, accurate enough to be confident hunting at close range,,
I am wondering,, did our ancestors put as much emphasis on a certain draw length, or did they pull to a draw weight,, especially the shorter bows,, of course you would not be able to over draw a bow and would need to now what the limit was, a mark on the arrow till you learned the bow,,
I guess my point is, I am amazed at the consistancy or accuracy that a short bow or draw can develope,, and understand more why the short horse bows,, worked well for that application,,
I plan on keeping up my practice and trying to shoot a deer with one of my shorter hunting bows this year,, it almost seems like shooting a sling shot,, and is very easy to execute the shot ,, when you are only drawing so short,, and totally eliminate a need to settle in on a anchor,, I really like it,, and it feels very natural too me,,, dont get me wrong if you want me to hit something at 60 yards I gonna draw a longer bow to an anchor and shoot like that,,
but for close range I enjoy the simple shot process of the short draw bow,,