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  3. Archery Shooters Association (ASA)

Archery Shooters Association (ASA)

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  • A Offline
    A Offline
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    Spent some time going down a 3D archery rabbit hole this week — relevant to anyone here who runs a bow alongside their firearms or uses off-season archery to stay sharp on distance reading and trigger discipline. The ASA piece covers more ground than most of us probably need, but a few things stood out.

    Prior to organizations like ASA, 3D archery existed largely as an informal extension of bowhunting culture -- clubs ran their own shoots with their own rules, and there was no national competitive structure to speak of.

    This mirrors exactly where a lot of local gun sports were before sanctioning bodies standardized things. IDPA, USPSA — same story. The informal era is fun until you want your score to mean something outside your home range.

    You're not shooting at a paper bullseye on a flat range; you're ranging a foam deer standing in a creek bed or a turkey on a hillside, then putting an arrow where it counts.

    This is the part that translates directly to practical shooting skills — unmarked distances, real terrain, no target stand to give away the range. Any shooter who's ever misjudged a distance on a field course knows that reading your environment is a skill that atrophies without practice. 3D archery is one of the better ways to work it without burning powder.

    Who benefits most from ASA membership: competitive 3D shooters who travel to multiple events per year, hunters who use the competitive circuit to sharpen their shooting during the off-season, and club organizers who want the credibility and structure of Federation affiliation.

    That middle group — hunters using it as off-season training — is probably the most practical fit for a lot of people in this area. Keep your eye calibrated through summer, show up to elk season with actual recent reps at unmarked distances.

    The 37-states footprint with 13 states having no Federation presence is a real issue if you're somewhere without local club access. Worth checking the map before assuming membership does anything for you at the local level.

    For those of you who run both a bow and a gun — how much crossover do you actually notice between your archery practice and your field shooting? Does working unmarked distances with a bow carry over when you're behind a rifle or handgun at unknown ranges?


    Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team

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