Martin Damon Howatt Hunter Recurve Bow

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Back in December at the urgin of my daughter, I got back into archery after a gap of probably 15 years. The only bow I had was a Martin Damon Howatt Hunter recurve. It pulls 55 lbs. at 28" and after such a long lapse in shooting a bow, I was seriously overbowed with it. So, I got a 40 lb. Magyar horse bow from Seven Meadows Archery that I've been shooting for the past three months.

Tonight after work I decided to give the old Martin a try. First, I put on a new Bear Hair arrow rest, to replace the old piece of moleskin that was on the shelf. As soon as I drew my first arrow, I knew that this would take a lot more effort than the lighter horse bow. Fifteen pounds may not seem like much but in the case of a stick bow, it is. That said, I was able to do four rounds of 11 arrows each before calling it quits. If I had not been shooting the lighter bow lately, I don't think I would have been able to shoot the heavier Martin nearly as many times. Shooting the horse bow definitely helped get my back and shoulder muscles back into shooting shape.

The modern recurve is an interesting contrast to the more primitive horse bow. The Martin, with its center shot riser and pistol grip with an arrow rest is much easier to shoot consistently than the non-center shot horse bow that you shoot off the knuckle. The Martin is also noticely smoother shooting, lacking the shock that you feel when the horse bow's siyahs spring forward.

The Martin seems to shoot a bit faster than the SMA horse bow, but it's not an apples-to-apples comparison. I'm shooting some old Easton Aluminum 2117 arrows in the recurve, while I'm using Port Orford Cedar arrows from 3 Rivers Archery with the horse bow. I'm using a target which can stop crossbow bolts and the arrows from the recruve don't seem to penetrate more than those from the lighter bow, but they do make a louder thwack when they hit. I'm certain that with a good broadside hit and a sharp broadhead, the Howatt Hunter would have no problem shooting clear through a whitetail.

This group isn't anything to brag about, but I plan to get a lot more practice in with the Martin. As I get back to shooting strength I expect my shooting to improve.

Martin_Howatt_Hunter.jpg
 
Hey Dave,

I shoot a Martin recurve as well.
Bow1.jpg

It's a Hunter model, 50# draw.

I always thought it was funny when my compound shooting friends would laugh at my puny 50# draw weight. I'd offer to let them shoot it. The look of "Oh" when they truly realize there's no running from that 50# when they get it drawn was always comical.

My point is that it's not hard at all to imagine anyone being overbowed by a similar draw weight after a lengthy hiatus. I have a friend that I used to shoot with often that probably couldn't shoot his 60# Bob Lee right now for the same reason.

What I do to increase strength after not shooting for a while is to draw the bow (you don't need an arrow) and hold the string at my anchor point (I use the corner of my mouth) for as long as I can, and repeat. I count off how many seconds I can hold the string back, and try to increase it everyday.

Seems to help quite a bit for me. YMMV.

Nice looking bow! What are you using for arrows?

Jason
 
Jason,

Thanks. Your's is a nice looking bow as well. Is it a Mamba?

I am shooting some Easton 2117s that I got around the same time I bought the bow, back in the mid 90s. The shafts are in good shape but I need to refletch them.
 
Dave nice looking bow you have there. I am glad to see that there are other left handers archers besides myself on THR.
 
Dave, nice bow! I love traditional bows and archery, and I am also returning back to archery after two decades.

In high school, I shot bows because my mom wouldn't let regularly haul my gun around. I have never hunted large game, but i have shot some bunnies and once a snake! I had a very early Bear compound and a couple Bear recurves, and I loved them.

Now though, i really think a crummy shoulder is going to restrict me to a compound, or maybe a traditional bow in the 30 pound range. I don't plan on hunting for awhile, if at all, so a low weight fun bow would be fine with me!

Sent from my DROID RAZR using Tapatalk
 
Martin's Hunter is the 870 of factory recurves. I had maybe 7 of them back in the day.

I also owned some high dollar recurves during that time, all 50-55 lb like the Hunters.

None of the high dollar stuff chrono'd faster, and most were slower. So was Martin's own TD, though not by much.

The downside was unique to me.The Hunters kept breaking, all in the lower tip and limb nigh the tip. Martin kept replacing them, but eventually I was embarrassed to tell them another had bit the dust and ventured into Longbows.

Then the rotator cuff went to Heck....

Have fun with yours....
 
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