RE: Tuning the archer!!!!!!!
I have been a bow hunter for 40 years and in those years, I have learned to accept the fact that I am not perfect but I have learned to capitalize on that deficiency.
FIRST: DON" T practice too much. Every other day is more than enough.
SECOND: DON' T shoot more than a dozen or two arrows in a session. One session a day.
THIRD: When practicing worry more about form than accuracy. Mentally and physically think, aloud if you wish each step in your form as you nock an arrow, draw your bow, anchor, aim, release, and FOLLOW THROUGH.
FOURTH:[b]FOLLOW THROUGH[/b]. When I have accuracy problems it is because my follow through did not follow through. As I anchor I say to myself " Push and pull through the shot . . . Follow Through"
FIFTH: Do not grip your bow [I use a wrist strap] this can cause torquing. DO NOT LOWER OR DROP your bow arm until after the arrow hits the target
If there is a reason for my shooting poorly it is lack of follow through. When my follow through breaks dowh I shoot high left or left. When I dop my bow arm, I shoot low right.
These are the flaws I have found in my own form in my years as an archer and I hope that sharing them will help you analyze your form and develop a method of overcoming them.