Competitive archery might well have begun with a couple of archers out of the Stone Age with too much time on their hands who wanted to learn who could shoot the furthest or the most accurately. Today's competitive archery runs the full gamut of bows and shooting styles.
There are flight bows which are used to shoot for pure distance. Competitive archery permits off-the-shelf bows to be used as well as customized or specialized bows made to shoot arrows enormous distances. At the time of this writing, the world record for an arrow's single flight is 1327 yards. Flight shoots are typically held in places such as airfields, dry lake beds, and desert plateaus to give the archers the space they need.
Field archery is a great way of bringing back to yourself the spark of adventure. With field archery you are shooting at targets out in the wilds such as forests. Archers who get into this format of competitive archery, in spite lost and damaged arrows, have a great time. Different disciplines in field archery permit archers to shoot at pre-known distances or at targets that need distance to be estimated in order to hit them.
3D archery is similar in many ways to field archery. The target course is always in a forest or wooded setting so as to allow for some very challenging placements of targets. What the targets are are plastic foam animal replicas. 3D competitive archery began in the United States but has been expanding with great success to various other parts of the globe.
Target archery in modern times began with Prince Regent of England who later came to be know as George the IV. The target, its size, and colors were established in the 1800s and today are largely unchanged. Archery competitions were originally shot with the longbow and target arrows. Some of the records set in target archery still remain unbroken. Some of these belong to England's Horace Ford, who was the single greatest longbowman target archer of his era. In 1972 the FITA world record for most points scored in competitive target archery was 1204. As of this writing, that record is now 1361 points. Clearly the skills of the archers have been evolving.
Competitive archery is shot indoors at the World level. This is actually one of the few sports on the globe which permits women and the disabled to compete on equal terms with male archers of sound body.
There are new forms of competitive archery being developed for the purpose of bringing archery to a wider audience. There are now head-to-head competitions with archers getting eliminated at each successive stage. It all leads up to showdown finale. These competitions are now being used at the World level. Many archery clubs are also beginning to host them. There is a wide array of forms of archery. If you are new to the sport, you will not be let down and you will find something that sparks your interest.
The compound bow in archery was a revolutionary invention that has changed the sport forevermore. The compound bow in archery was invented in the mid 1960s by an American engineer named Howless Wibur Allen. In 1961 he got inspired by the then launching of Hoyt Pro Medalist Bow. This bow was one of the very first to have vertical stabilizers on it, and Allen had another idea to add to it-the wheel. He harnessed the principle of the block and tackle pulley to the bow and felt (correctly) that this would enhance a bow's performance. The mechanics of the pulley system would, he reasoned, allow a heavier weight to be drawn. After continued experimentation he found that round pulleys and cam-shaped wheels worked best and they were riding on off-set axles called "eccentrics". The compound bow reaches its peak weight in the middle of the draw; beyond this point as the archer continues to draw back the weight of the draw is significantly reduced, allowing an average-sized archer to comfortably hold a very heavy weight. The compound bow in archery gives an amazing flat trajectory to an arrow's flight.
It actually took several years for Allen to get anyone to manufacture his new invention, the compound bow. American laws prohibited the use of mechanical devices attached to bows. So, the compound bow could not be used for hunting nor in competitions. Allen began making his own bows, sure that they would catch on so strongly that the laws would be rewritten (and he was once again correct). However, when he was making his own compound bows he realized that he had a design flaw, as he kept on stripping the fletching off his arrows. The crossing cables in the center of the bow were interfering with the arrow's flight. By 1967 Allen had figured out that he needed to add an extra set of "idle" wheels that got mounted at the center of each limb. These idle wheels were set at 90 degree angles to the limb-tip, and this allowed the cables to now cross to one side of the center line so that they no longer interfered with the arrows' flight path. With more research, Allen added riser-mounted adjusters so that the archer could use different cable lengths to attain different weights. These adjusters were gear-driven and acted very much like the machine heads for tuning a guitar.
By this time, the compound bow or "Allen bow" was a superior instrument. The flatter and faster trajectory that an arrow could be given due to the increase in stored potential energy meant that now a heavy hunting arrow would be able to find its mark more often and would fly with greater speed. The lighter weight as compared to a recurve bow of the same draw weight meant that this bow was more comfortable to use, as well. However, the sport's governing body still would have nothing to do with it.
However, the famous American archer and archery magazine editor Tom Jennings love the idea and he used his pull to get the governing body to begin reconsidering its stance. Jennings published an article titled "A Bow with a Compound Interest". From there, the compound bow found its way into archery.
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