Hey tranders
I’ve been shooting off and on for a lot of years and I really enjoy it all. I’ve shot fingers with tabs, gloves, and bare skin, and I’ve shot several different releases, through it all.
I bought a new Matthews Legacy this year against the advice of my dealer. He asked how I would shoot it, and I told him that I like both fingers and releases. The Icon is a little longer and has a softer eccentric, more forgiving, less angle at the nock, etc. He told me this as I was shooting the Legacy in his range with bare fingers.
I left without it and did some thinking. I went back and bought the bow set up for a release, along with a prong rest (my first), and a new Fletchhunter Shorty release.
At home and at a range, I began getting acquainted with the new bow and set the sights. I did not make a single session with it without putting the release in the pouch and pulling out a Wilson hair tab. Now the nock point, the new “release style” rest, the sights, everything was set up for a release. I just stepped up to five or ten steps from the target bag and tried it. I’ve been shooting three fingers under on my long bow lately, and I was trying to see what I’d have to allow or change on the new rig. I didn’t rush or sweat it, just tried it and thought about a different sight for fingers, or marking a different nock point with floss, changing my anchor point, etc., just thinking, up close, no changes.
Wait a minute, I was shooting low. I tried one finger over/two under. I was very happy to find that now I can shoot my new rig either way by only sliding the soft release spacer down and out of the way.
I took the long way around to say just stay having fun while you shoot and just try what you have and keep it simple. What should you change? As little as possible, and I can’t say for sure in your case. I caught on to a lot one year reading the Easton Arrow booklet about picking your arrows, tuning your bow, etc. (Last year it was accessible online.) I then read after Asbell, Hill, Adams, and so forth, enjoying new recreation that I had not understood. I also found some people to shoot with that made it more fun and I started learning from them: whatever you dream up, someone has tried, or will maybe try with you.
The dealer does know what he was talking about. And I know he knows. He has helped me and I’ve found that what he says I can put in the bank. The Legacy seems to be just made for me and my play.
If you run into a specific situation, just ask.
DoC