Chairmans Blog
Season 2 with Debbie McGeePosted in Chairmans Blog on July 13, 2011 by El Presidente Debbie McGee, Jedi Knights, Arrow Spines, the Wife Swap, the Wind, Shiny new Toys and Gravy…
Season2 shoots 1 through 4
The Indoor Bit – Debbie McGee and a Jedi Knight Hey folks, it’s been a loooong while since my last blog so I thought one was well overdue. The 2010 Outdoor Season ended for me in September at Balbardie at the Eastern Area Champs where you may recall I finished my novice season with a PB of 947 for a FITA – missing my target of 1,000 but sharing my journey along the way. I had never intended to blog through the Indoor Season as I had a hunch I would be just too busy. In the end this would be right.
Over the Indoor Season I did a lot of work for the Eastern Area setting up and running a new Junior League with great assistance from my able assistant Debbie McGee (well OK it was Bill). In addition to this I was delighted to help our club out as we ran two new beginners courses with many a new member signed up. Finally along with Mark, Iain and Gilbert I qualified as a Level 1 coach. This led to a significantly reduced numbers of sessions practising which was further compounded by some awful weather leading to many cancelled club nights. The net result of all this was that I developed a few form faults which became quite ingrained and led to my scores dropping – nay plummeting like a loosely held bow from an archer (okay me) who has forgot to put his finger sling on - over the Indoor Season. To be honest there was a time in March when I shot a 400 odd on a Portsmouth (130+ points down on my average score not my PB), my ring finger on my drawing arm was wrecked, my bow arm had horrendous tennis elbow and I just thought “that’s it I just can’t be bothered anymore”, it’s true folks my archery got so bad in the Indoor Season el Presidente was ready to quit shooting for good at the March AGM.
So what happened? Well about a month before the end of the Indoor Season Obi Wan Murray came over to me and said “ use the force Kev” – well OK not quite he started to tell me all about the benefits of practising (with a bow not a lightsabre) at short distance with your eyes shut to develop the feel of the shot. Sure enough two of my good shooting buddies Gilbert and Donald confirmed the success they had with this technique (UNDER SAFE AND CONTROLLED CONDITIONS) and were amazed how good their groups got. Anyway Murray told me that I was “getting in the way of the arrow” and “don’t worry about it I’ve been there before and it’s pretty lonely but we’ll sort it”. The he just told me to shoot lot’s of arrows walked away and said nothing whilst he watched me shooting for about 4 ends.
Murray then proceeded to demonstrate that I had developed a couple of faults that were throwing off my grouping and that the poor results were wrecking my confidence, which made the faults worse and so on creating a horrible cycle. We worked on the loose A LOT, I don’t know how but over the indoor season I had lost any pretence of a controlled expansion, it was basically pulling the string to the clicker, waiting a long time until my brain said (SHOOT NOW) and then wrenching the string through the clicker and letting go with the fingers plucking the string in all manner of interesting directions but seldom back the way in a controlled fashion. This helped explain why I could maybe shoot some good arrows a lot of mediocre arrows and many bad arrows in any given round. My confidence just sapped as everyone else’s groups tightened over the Indoor Season and I was still regularly hitting blacks and blues on any given round despite practising as much as time would permit.
So I had to relearn how to loose, drawing the string and then expanding subtly through the clicker. I did as best as I could at this over the next month and gradually my groups improved firstly by eliminating the really horrid arrows and then blues disappeared and then 8s etc. By the end of the season I finally achieved my first C Class score (most of my shooting buddies had achieved that by Christmas) but it was too late to put together another two and gain my C Classification.
Outdoor Tinkering – Arrow Spine So the Outdoor Season started with abandon, I got myself an extender, V bar and twins to supplement my long rod stabiliser. I was also working with a much reduced draw length because Murray was convinced that was part of the reason I had been dragging through the clicker. The net result of all this was that even with the limbs fully wound in and me holding 45lbs on my fingers my Navigators just couldn’t reach 90m without aiming at the top of the flag – no surprise really if you look at last season’s blogs. I was hoping that I might have made it because we had wound in the limbs fully adding about 4lbs over the winter however the reduced drawlength must have cancelled out the benefit because my bow sounded like an unhappy croaking, galley as I drew it and the arrows were still only achieving 180 feet per second. To give you an idea we got Gilbert to shoot my arrows from his bow (similar set up) pulling to the same draw length and whilst his ACEs were hitting the gold mines were falling about 5m short of the target – and I couldn’t move my sight anymore.
So we knew it was the arrows, sure enough a quick check of the Easton charts confirmed that at the Arrow Length I had my Navs at were working out at 388 grains. An equivalent set of ACEs were only 287 grains – i.e. they were 26% lighter.
I tried lightening the points and even cutting the arrows a bit to lighten them. Unfortunately both of these actions made an already overstiff arrow intolerably stiff and they were just untunable. I eventually accepted defeat and new that I’d have to buy myself some new arrows so with my birthday in mind (June – so it was somewhat early ahem) I sucked it up and bought a new set of ACEs which Murray help me cut and tune over the course of a sunny evening. WHAT A DIFFERENCE, what I hadn’t realised until now was just how forgiving arrows with the correct spine could be. I could see my groups at 30m improve enormously and that was with some pretty ropey looses, I guess I just hadn’t realized how much I was being punished before when I had a mediocre loose. Sure I was able to get some much better scores at the end of the Indoor Season with my Navs at 18m but I was a sweating wreck at the end of the shoot and I still struggled at 30m when we went outside. With the ACEs I got away with a lot more and suddenly I understood what Gilbert and Donald were saying all indoor season when they said a bad shot is now an 8 (well not for me it wasn’t guys it could easily be a 1 or a miss but now it felt like that a bad shot probably would still be an 8).
So after Shoots 1 and 2 I got my shiny new ACEs. To summarise the eventual changes to my bow set up and equipment since the last outdoor season were as follows:
FITA 2.1 Eastern Area Double FITA Star, 14th to 15th May 2011 (shot prior to purchasing my new ACEs). - The Wife Swap
For those that remember the weather this Spring April and May seemed to have done some kind of weird wife swap, we had two glorious weeks in April when I wasn’t shooting (Patio building – yaay) and then May (normally a relatively safe(ish) bet in Scotland) was a howling gale for most of the month.
So FITA no.1 was up at Penicuik and I can honestly say that the weather was absolutely horrendous. The vast majority of the field were down by 100 to 200 points and there were a large number of retirals. How did I get on?
90m 50 points – Seriously I hit the boss about 50% of the time in the wind and even that was basically aiming my bow somewhere into the air above and to the right of the target. The thing is I actually didn’t get phased by it because the wind was so bad it was almost funny – only one Gent in the whole recurve field broke 200 and I counted 6 MB archers beneath him.
70m 124 points - Well at least I could aim at or to the side of the target now J. I spent most of the time just trying to figure out how far to aim off and it showed. Sure the rest of the field were struggling too but this was a poor performance on my part. Again though I just didn’t bother about it because there was nothing I could do about the weather and any form issues were just getting accentuated by my overheavy and out of tune Navs.
50m 156 points – Same story as 70 to be honest I just couldn’t group them at all.
30m Although I normally step into 30m with a bit of trepidation because of last season’s consistent ability to underperform at this distance on this particular day I didn’t really care. It was still blowing a gale and everyone just wanted to get home. I was therefore somewhat surprised when I turned in a 290 which was 8 points better than last season’s PB of 282. I’m not by any means saying that this was good shooting however in the wind and at my least successful distance I was pretty happy to shoot a PB.
Total for the day: Target Score 1,000 Actual Score 620 Prior best 947
OK it was a shocker – my lowest ever score at a FITA, I’ll put it down to lack of outdoor practice, the wind and most importantly me. However I honestly was very happy because of the 30m score and to anyone in the club reading this thinking that Archery competitions seems like self inflicted torture I would say to you that the beauty of the FITA system is that you get five opportunities to win really (the overall score and the four different distances) and in case you are wondering no I’m not deluding myself - to me a win is setting a PB – I can’t really dictate how the other competitors will shoot.
FITA 2.2 – the Wind So Gilbert picked me up on what was an equally rubbish morning and by the time we got to Penicuik we half convinced ourselves that it would be cancelled. Certainly looking at the target list and the lack of scopes on the line one would have been forgiven for thinking this however a small but committed (pun intended) band of archers set themselves up for Day 2 of the fun.
90 & 70m were 165 and 206 for a total of 371 for the long metric which was still sub par but a significant improvement on yesterdays 50 and 124. 50m seemed pretty similar with a 226 posted which was 70 points up on the previous day.
30m OK so based on yesterday’s PB I was well up for shooting this distance now. End 1 – first arrow in the 6 followed by two 8s a 9 and two 10s – total 51 End 2 – 10,9,7,10,8,7 – total 51 this game is starting to be fun. End 3 – 9,9,8,X,9,6 - a huge gust blew my bow arm off target giving me a 51 again. End 4 – 10,8,8,9,8,8 – total 51 starting to fight the wind on every arrow now. End 5 – 9,8,8,X,6,6 – 47 the two blues were a real struggle in the wind, lot’s of coming down and resetting. End 6 – 9,8,7,9,8,2 – I was up for this and I really was determined to concentrate in the wind and get my 300 for the first time. The wind was pretty strong by this point and people all down the line were resetting. I shot arrows 142 and 143 for a 9 and an 8 giving myself 30 seconds to shoot the final arrow of the day…and the wind kept puffing, having already blows several houses (ok tents) down. Twice I reset because the wind blew the arrow off the riser (stupid flappy clicker). So with about 5 seconds to go I reset came to draw and just wrenched the arrow into the 2, the problem was that the arrow hit the 2 about a third of a second after the judge blew for time over (her opinion and I had to concede I was past the whistle – archery is a game of honesty above all things I think). I looked round at my fellow target companions who all gave a collective groan because we all knew that it is the highest arrow that get’s discounted so suddenly my 43 became a 9,8,7,Miss,8,2 for a 34.
I hadn’t done the maths before the start of the end but it turns out I wasn’t on for the 300 because of the 2 anyway but if the 9 had counted I would have got a 294 and raised my PB – still them’s the rules..
Target Score 300 Actual Score 285 Prior best 290 As I said – stupid wind, stupid flappy clicker, stupid Kev…
Total for the day: Target Score 1,000 Actual Score 882 Prior best 947
I was actually pretty happy, the weather still sucked and I’d brought my score up by a good whack on day 1 cutting the 127 point day 1 lead the guy ahead of me had to 16 points on the aggregate score. OK so the last arrow in the wind was a total mess but my standard of shooting at this distance had improved a great deal on the first season.
I should also mention that my shooting buddy Gilbert got his 1,000 point FITA star on this day too – well done mate – thoroughly deserved!
Gilbert and I attended a York in Glamis a few weeks later which is set within the grounds of the castle and must surely be the prettiest ground on the circuit. The wind was horrendous, as we drove though the gates and up the road towards the castle you could see lots of stately trees which had been blown over and cracked into horrid shapes by the gales. In the ends the shoot got cancelled after 8 dozen arrows because two bosses blew over and quite a few arrows got smashed (none of them mine). It was so windy I can’t really say I learned much that day other than if you are walking back towards the shooting line after collecting your arrows and your tent is suddenly 10m further away than it was last end it is time to collapse the shelter and put it in the bag.
FITA 2.3 – UK National Series, Penicuik 18 June 2011 – Shiny new toys 90m 164 – this was still a struggle to be honest. I was trying out my shiny new ACEs so I couldn’t blame the arrows anymore. I just had a lot of poor arrows and ended up with a miss on every end which is just not good enough.
70m End 1: 9,8,8,7,7,5 for a 44 – Good start, sightmark confirmed pretty quick. End 2: 8,7,7,4,4,4 total 34 – Hmmm not sure what happened on the three 4s but let’s forget them. Ends four and 5 were 46s which is good for me. End 5 – X,7,6,6,6,5 total 40 – meh. End 6 – 7,7,6,6,5,3 total 34 - a poor last end, just couldn’t hit the gold frustratingly.
Target Score 250 Actual Score 244 Prior best 259 Down by 20 points or so on where I should have been.
50m (shot in ends of 3 but I’ll count them as six to keep it going) End 1: 7,5,5,8,8,7 total 40 – A poor first end, not sightmarks though just post lunch inactivity I think. End 2: X,9,4,10,7,7, total 47 – better much better End 3: 10,9,7,8,6,6 total 46 – again keep it up. End 4: 8,8,5,8,7,6 total 42 – Stupid 5, bad shot move on. End 5: 7,7,7,8,8,8, total 45 – no great arrows but I’ll take the score. End 6: 10,8,7,9,6,6 total 46 – The first three made up for the last :D
Target Score 250 Actual Score 266 Prior best 248 A new PB, no jolts and felt very confident – I was happy with this, the key thing for me was that I did not let 50m scare me the way it did last year and that after the 5 in end 4 I just forgot about it and moved on.
30m End 1: 10,9,9,10,8,3, total 49 – a good first end for me, first arrow sight mark was wrong though. End 2: X,9,8,9,9,8 total 53 - this is solid, no worse than a 9 though please. End 3: 9,9,9,X,10,9 total 56 – I love this game End 4: 10,8,6,X,8,7 total 49 – unhappy with the 6 and the 7 which were down to a lack of focus. End 5: 10,9,8,X,8,8 total 53 – keep it going… End 6: 9,9,8,10,8,8 total 52 – hmm I’ve shot better but I didn’t blow it at the end though.
Target Score 300 Actual Score 312 Prior best 290 Loving it – finally broke though that 300 barrier and I didn’t feel like a wreck at the end of it. It just felt like fun!
Total for the day: Target Score 1,000 Actual Score 986 Prior best 947
Yup you guessed it – I still didn’t break the 1,000 point barrier largely because of my sub par 90 and 70m scores. Still I set PBs at 50m and 30m and broke my overall PB by nearly 40 points. I went home thinking, if I could just practice a lot more at the longer distances and maintain my short metric scores I really would have no problem getting my scores up a good bit. So goes the theory anyway.
Shoot 4 a York – Pentangle, Kilwinning 19 June 2011 – MMMM Gravy
The next day was new territory. Gilbert and I along with Margaret from the club had qualified to represent the Eastern Area at the annual inter area shoot between the three Scottish Areas and the two most northerly English Counties – the shoot collectively known as the Pentangle. I picked Gilbert up early in the morning and we headed off to Kilwinning to an unfamiliar ground for the shoot. The weather was OK and a rather large weather vane (which handily also produces electricity – always wondered what they were for at our ground) made it pretty easy to tell what way the wind was really blowing if like me you get a bit suspicious of that little flag on top of the boss at times.
For those in the club that haven’t shot a York before it is a different type of round to the usual FITA you read about in my blog. Importantly rather than shooting 36 arrows at each distance you shoot 6 dozen at 100 yards, 4 dozen at 80 yards and 2 dozen at 60 yards. You’ll note that all distances are measured in imperial measurements not metric. Finally 5 zone scoring is used (e.g. a gold is always a 9 – you can not get a ten) and the face size remains at 122cm at all distances. In summary it’s still archery but there are enough differences to make it a different experience on the day from shooting a FITA.
I had no real benchmark for my scores on this as I’d never completed a York before – the scores aren’t really that comparable to a FITA because of the imperial scoring system however there is a clever calculator you can use for your total score which calculates a FITA equivalent at the end.
100 yards End 1 – 5,5,1,1,1, M - 13, really struggled in the wind, I couldn’t figure out where to aim off leading to lot’s of poor arrows. End 2 – 9,5,3,3,1,M – 21, another poor end with only one good arrow. End 3 – 9,5, M, M, M, M – the first MMMM I’d had at competition in a good while – as great a sound as it may be on a gravy or coffee advert it ain’t much fun in an archery competition. End 4 – 9,7,7,5,3,1 – 32 – Angry Kev does not do gravy… End 5 – 9,7,7,7,7,5 – 42, …he eats gravy for breakfast… End 6 – 9,7,5,5,3,1 – 30,…no wait a minute that doesn’t work…Doh!
Anyway we were given a fairly decent break for food/drink etc. (not a Bisto product in sight I swear) and then cracked on with the remaining 36 arrows at 100 yards.
My ends went 13, 14, 26, 23, 25 and 38 – other than the last one I was unhappy with all of my performances. I’m not sure if it was having too long a break or because I’m so used to moving to 70m after the first session but I have to say I found 100 yards a struggle all in.
Total Score 291
80yards End 1 – 9,9,7,5,5,1 – 36, other than the first sight mark shot I was happy enough. End 2 – 9,7,7,5,3,3 – 34, hmm not a step in the right direction. End 3 – 9,9,9,9,7,7 – 50 – this is it we’ve woken up now here we go… …but apparently we’d already gone I finished off with ends of 40, 34, 32, 32 and 40.
Total Score 298
60yards End 1 – 9,7,7,7,7,1 – 38, same story with the sightmark, I’d been off all day. End 2 – 9,9,7,7,7,5 – 44, meh End 3 – 9,9,7,7,7,5 – 44, extra meh End 4 – 9,7,7,7,5,3 - 38, uncharacteristic for me but I think my focus had kind of gone at the end to be honest.
Total Score 164.
Total Score for first York 753.
Analysis – Hard for me to say much on this as I had never finished a round before. I’m in two minds about the York round to be honest – if you shoot well at 100yards on the day they are great as you only need to hit the outer gold for a top score each time. However if you are struggling on the day like me then 6 dozen arrows (i.e. half the round) at 100 yards seems like a long process.
We did the FITA conversions and it turns out I scored a 932 FITA equivalent which is useful progress on the early season but a bit disappointing to be honest. Gilbert however scored an 1130 equivalent which is a fantastic achievement – well done my friend.
As an team Gilbert and I along with John Purdie from Crief managed a 3rd place Gents Recurve of the 5 Areas (and top Scottish Area) which we were happy with for our first proper York and team event. Gilbert also scored a very creditable 4th place. The Ladies did even better with Margaret, Caroline (Bannockburn) and Jen (EUAC) winning Ladies Recurve Silver and Margaret and Naomi (EUAC) winning Ladies Individual Silvers in Recuvre and Compound respectively.
Lots of practice in July will be had for the next Tournaments which are the Scottish Champs in August.
I’m off to watch Star Wars with my Sunday Roast and lashings of Gravy…
Tags: None Belated blog!Posted in Chairmans Blog on October 08, 2010 by Murray Elliot FITA’s – 5-8 … PB or Angry Bees?…that is the question
Apologies - it has been ages since my last blog – a whole lot of things like work, novice champs, BBQ’s, club champs, work, the garden and work got in the away…you get the picture.
FITA 5 & 6 – Scottish Outdoor Championships in Glasgow 7 and 8th of August 2010.
On the basis this was ages ago I will keep my comments very brief….
…Shot like a lemon for two days!
To be clear I was very enthusiastic and shot well in practice on Day 1 (only one end by the way so you have to make it count). I then followed this up with a 215 at 90m which was a PB for me (prior best 195) and through the 200 target for the first time. 70m on day 1 was again ok – a 230, not brilliant but close to my 250 target. After lunch it all went horribly wrong. For those that have read my previous blogs remember that Time Warp thing I had a few months ago where the bow stepped to the right when I released? Well it looks like this had mutated and the bow was now jolting to the left. This was the start of a consistent problem that persisted for the rest of the Saturday and all of the Sunday – I just could not shake it. All in all a pretty depressing two days for me however the weather was excellent (indeed too hot at times) and Tom and I kept one another in good cheer if nothing else.
FITA 5 – total score - 891
FITA 6 – total score – 801
As I said my shooting was decidedly citron flavoured and the scores had regressed materially and the only person who found it funny was Clicky who continued to misbehave at times.
FITA 7 & 8 – Eastern Area Outdoor Championships in Balbardie 11th and 12th of September 2010.
This was it – last chance of the season to improve my PB and break the 1000 barrier.
Day 1 – as Murray and I travelled to the field about half a mile form my house we hit a monsoon and fog with very limited visibility on the road. Murray promptly proclaimed there was no way he’d be shooting if the torrential conditions were in evidence at the field (about 6 miles away). Thankfully the vagaries of Scottish weather were on our side (well somewhat) and it appeared that the rainy weather was to remain in Linlithgow and stay away from Bathgate.
We had a good field party from the club this weekend (thanks guys!!!) and so the field was set up and ready to shoot in good time.
Practice went well – I was right of the boss with my first arrow and after that I was on with all my others. However all of my arrows were short and I couldn’t understand why. Unfortunately my sight was as far down the bar as it could go but at the farthest out setting. I couldn’t bring the sight in towards the riser because Clicky was one of those attach to the sight bar efforts which I was using to compensate for my overly long and overly stiff arrows.
Anyway this meant that I was aiming just off the flag ay 90m which was hardly ideal but I just had to get on with it.
90m
End 1: 8,8,2,1, Miss, Miss for a 19. Not a good start, no real grouping.
70m
End 1: 8,8,7,6,6,5 for a 40 – for me this was a solid enough first end.
Target Score 250 Actual Score 219 Prior best 259
Ahem – after my release from the anger management course I grabbed some lunch (not a honey product in sight) and swapped war stories.
Because it was a home competition we managed to persuade a few newbies to try out this competition lark and we ended up with a good attendance. Hardly being an experienced archer myself I passed on the one pearl of wisdom I learned at my first competition which was to reduce the number of arrows in your quiver from 7 (6 plus a spare) to 4 (3 plus a square) at the start of the lunch break before you do anything else. This was greeted with the usual cries of “yeah yeah stop fussing Kev / Fed up aiming at that flag yet? / Fancy some Innocent smoothie - it’s got honey in it?” etc. etc. from my club mates.
1 hour later when we started the first end at 50m, I saw one of my club mates being whistled off the line after the allotted 2 minute mark. Knowing the archer I can only assume there had been an equipment failure or that the wind was bothering him because he is pretty quick. Therefore when the judge enquired into how many arrows he had shot and he responded “that was my fifth” there were a few groans because everyone knew that meant the highest two scoring arrows (both golds) had to be discounted from the score from that end.
Now I’m far too polite to mention the name of this archer because he is a good friend and shooting buddy whom I shoot with on the line every week. He had made a simple mistake that could happen to anyone and it wouldn’t do to name and shame him on the website. The individual in question is renowned in the club for shooting pretty quickly and there is a good reason why this young man is nicknamed Espresso and we all felt for him on the day…. However it was nearly a month ago now so if you all want to congratulate Gilbert on his special moment feel free to do so now.
50m (shot in ends of 3 but I’ll count them as six to keep it going)
Target Score 250 Actual Score 203 Prior best 240
Dire just dire, the last two ends were acceptable but the last arrow summed up the whole experience. Stupid 50m…
30m
Target Score 300 Actual Score 277 Prior best 282
It seems like I always shoot a lot worse than everyone else at this distance – (why am I the only one that doesn’t break 300), and today was another typical performance. I can hit a good end but always seem to blow it with too many blues.
Total for the day:
We packed up, and headed home wet in spirit and in body. I politely declined my wife’s offer of honeycomb ice cream for desert and dreamed happy dreams about sawing down trees with woodpeckers in them….
FITA no 8
Stompy informed me that the rain had returned overnight, finding it infinitely preferably to dry out his wet fur by rolling around on the bed to actually standing still and being dried with a towel. I had a drowsy debate with him about the merits of sleeping for a further hour and not having breakfast at 5am however the conversation was decidedly one sided. Having fed the cat with sufficient left over burger to give him the meat sweats, he staggered off to his rug, yawned and fell asleep, indignant that the Breakfast service had been so sloppy this morning. Meanwhile I grabbed my gear just in time for Murray who was remarkably chipper given how early it was. I assume this was the endorphins talking because the poor guy had a sore back and decided not to shoot today however he turned up to help with the field party and assist/heckle his club mates all the same. What a nice bloke.
Practice Yup – my previous sight mark was the same, that little piece of cloud just above and to the right of the flag…
90m
Target Score 200 Actual Score 201 Prior best 215
Much better than yesterday’s 188, should have been even higher apart from a bad last end. In retrospect I was happy with this as a score (above target and an improvement on yesterday) however it would appear that the jolts had returned.
70m
Target Score 250 Actual Score 216 Prior best 259
Another disappointing 70m sailed by, for me this wasn’t awful by any means but it was sub hurdle and just had too many poor arrows.
Lunch Time anecdote?
This one comes from the Scottish Champs the previous month but I thought it best to save the best to last. I was shooting with well known archery comedians Derek McAuley and Jim Buchanan. Whilst shooting at 30m I saw Jim (a solid guy who was a boxer in a previous life) freak out and nearly throw his compound onto the 3m line. Jim was shooting well so I knew it wasn’t that and so naturally I was a little concerned when he got off the line as quick as he could. On the way up the field towards collecting the arrows Jim told us that he was terrified of wasps and one had settled on his scope at full draw and it completely freaked him out.
If this wasn’t enough to convince us that Jim really didn’t like the buzzing menace he told us a story about work where it was really hot one day and the wasps were at that angry drunken stage of the year where they just get vicious. Having been ambushed by a particularly vicious specimen of the species poor Jim jumped away from his desk in alarm. I’m not sure what happened to the wasp but thankfully Jim is still with us after dangling from the cab of the crane that he operates and climbing back inside…still at least he doesn’t have vertigo!
50m (shot in ends of 3 but I’ll count them as six to keep it going)
Target Score 250 Actual Score 248 Prior best 240
Ooh – so close, a new PB and would have got the 250 were it not for my jolting episode just in the middle of my tree climbing purple patch. Despite my whining I was actually pretty happy.
30m
End 6: X,10,8,10,9… and a jolt for a three.Total 50 – Disappointing last arrow in what should have been a good end.
Target Score 300 Actual Score 282 Prior best 282
Well another 30m whistles by with me being the only one not hitting 300, I equalled my PB but this is simply not good enough I really do get frustrated when I miss out on say 20 points at this distance each time because of four or five arrows that sink into the blue.
Total for the day: Target Score 1,000 Actual Score 947 Prior best 940
OK so let’s keep this in perspective 90m – on target, 70m was sub par, 50m on target and 30m was frustratingly in the 280s again. Out of all of this it is only the 30m I was really hacked off about because it just seems so damn silly giving away 20 points at the shortest distance because of an error (albeit an ever changing one) in form all the time. However I have to be honest, yes I missed my 1,000 point target by a good 50 odd points however despite the bees, jolting and usual 30m dorkathon I still turned in a PB on the last shoot of the season so the answer to the question at the start of this blog is: Angry bees - no, PB - yes!
That’s it the Season is over, after 8 FITAs I’ll sum it up with a little Q&A.
Did I get to where I wanted to be? - no.
Do I feel like a failure? – yes a little bit.
Did I have fun? - yes absolutely, the frustrating moments make the good ones feel even better.
Did I make any progress? – yes in 8 FITAs I’ve improved from 760 to 947 and got myself up from Novice to a 1st Class classification winning the Eastern Area Novice and Scottish Novice Champs along the way.
Am I hacked off I never got my 1000? – you bet. Will I be getting it next year? – absolutely and I’ll be going for that 1,100 score too…
That’s it for 2010 folks.
El Presidente Tags: None My Fourth FITA… Clickety, Click, Click…Posted in Chairmans Blog on July 30, 2010 by El Presidente OK so FITA no 4 was up – the West of Scotland Championships in Milngavie. Training for this consisted of lots of half FITAs and the purchase of a new cavalier clicker (affectionately known as Clicky), the type you place on the sight bar to accommodate for my overly long and overly stiff arrows.
As low as having two of Gilbert’s ACEs in your quiver whilst you are on holiday in Canada for a month while the rest of us search the field every week and then eventually accept they are a sacrifice to the arrow god (not guilty by the way it was another committee member). As low as gluing spin wing fletches to a car aerial to improve aerodynamic efficiency (again not me). So low… anyway you get my point… my arrows were limbo dancing and thought the bar was set at 6 in the blue. I knew something a bit more radical than moving my sight down was required. As I knocked my 6th arrow I noticed that Clicky had jumped forward half an inch on the sight bar – no wonder!
Tags: None My Third FITA… It's just a jump to the left… And then a step to the right…Lets do this FITA again….Posted in Chairmans Blog on July 15, 2010 by El Presidente This was my first FITA double (two FITAs one day after another with the aggregate scores combined) and the clubs 20th Anniversary shoot to boot so I was very excited about the weekend. A huge thanks have to go to Josie and both Senior and Junior David Herds for all the effort they put in to organising the competition – Josie was working on this all week!
Tags: None My Second FITA… The off the shoulder look doesn’t combine well with gold…Posted in Chairmans Blog on June 16, 2010 by El Presidente Chairman’s Blog 13 June 2010 Tags: None Powered by LyftenBloggie
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