how can people's unawareness of archery as a sport, affect this sport?
please answer this question correctly please ya
Answers
Answer:
bro give proper question
Explanation:
QUESTION IS CORRECT BUT YOU SHOULD SAY WHICH SPORT IS BEING AFFECTED.
I will try a version of these other fine answers.
Archery is difficult but it's not tough.
If you're close to the target, which is a good way to begin, you hit it more often and enjoy the sport more. Ten feet is a good starting distance. You'll break a few arrows, so you'll buy some repair equipment like vanes, glue, nocks, various other stuff. You'll stash them in the box you used as a kid when you played slot cars--I did, anyway. It still has the stickers on it from the '60s.
You move away from the bag step by step, week by week unless you like chasing arrows. This is what happens when you miss the bag. Beginners will start with maybe fifteen or twenty pounds fibreglass recurve bows, snagged like at Big 5 for like twenty-five bucks. Yes. You'll spend more later. Even at twenty pounds draw weight, you still may have to walk fifty yards to get your arrow. Boring.
As you gain strength, you'll increase the strength of your bow, the development of your muscles, and your aim. It's sweet.
If you go slow you won't hurt your shoulder, as mentioned in the other fine answers, and if you don't hypertext your elbow on drawing, you'll find a lot of fun maybe had.
I shoot from both sides--holding a recurve in my left hand, and holding a compound bow in my right hand. I don't think my brain could handle shooting two different bows from the same hand. Boobie-shoobie, flip city, you hear? Couldn't pull it off, so to speak.
It's lots of fun, though, testing myself against myself--I don't use sights, shooting by looking. I'm a bit better with the compound than with the recurve, but I enjoy the recurve most.