Lots of us stayed outside to watch the big solar eclipse this week, but this isn’t the view any of us saw. Instead of looking up at the skies, the University of Wisconsin Madison time-lapsed weather satellite imagery to track the shadow of the moon as it crossed the US.
Jury awards $417M to woman who says she got cancer from talc in baby powder
A Los Angeles jury awarded a woman a $417 million verdict yesterday. The jury found that Johnson & Johnson failed to adequately warn users of the cancer risks of the talc in its baby powder.
The jury’s 9-3 vote to hold J&J liable for not warning Eva Echeverria about cancer risks is a huge blow to the company, which is facing thousands of such claims across the country. The verdict consists of $70 million in compensatory damages and $347 million in punitive damages, according to Reuters.
No clear link connects talcum powder to ovarian cancer. Some case-control studies, based on asking women who have ovarian cancer about their history, have found a slightly increased risk. But as the American Cancer Society notes, those kinds of studies can be biased because they rely on a person’s memory of talc use years after the fact.
Two prospective cohort studies, which don’t suffer from that type of hindsight bias, found no increased risk.
It is plausible, scientists say, that talcum powder applied to the genitals could travel through the vagina and into the ovaries, causing inflammation. Since inflammation increases the risk of cancer, it’s possible that talc causes cancer. But, again, the two most rigorous studies didn’t find any link.
Harvard University epidemiologist Daniel Cramer has published several studies, beginning in 1982, that found a link between talc exposure and increased ovarian cancer. Cramer worked as a paid consultant for the plaintiff’s lawyers in a St. Louis case that resulted in a $72 million verdict against J&J.
Talc, a clay mineral found around the world, is often used in powder form as a moisture-absorbing product and sold as talcum powder. “Baby powder” is a marketing term for cosmetic products that can be made from corn starch, talc, and other powders. Earlier versions of talcum powder sometimes contained asbestos, a known cancer-causing agent. But asbestos hasn’t been present in talcum powder in the US since the 1970s.
Landmark verdict
The Echeverria case was the first California talc case to go to trial, and the jury’s massive figure will set a new standard for the many talc cases to come. Hundreds more are in earlier stages of litigation in California alone.
The 63-year-old woman used J&J’s products for decades before she developed terminal ovarian cancer. Echeverria’s lawyers said that J&J encouraged women to use the product, despite knowing about studies linking talc and ovarian cancer.
The case was the first state trial outside of Missouri, Bloomberg reported. J&J has faced five Missouri trials over the last two years and lost four of them. The company has been hit with verdicts as high as $110 million.
“J&J needs to see they not only have verdicts against them in St. Louis; they now also have them in Los Angeles,” Mark Robinson, Echeverria’s lawyer, told Bloomberg. “There’s a problem all over the country with women using talcum powder on a daily basis for 10, 20, 30, 40 years.”
J&J has said they will appeal the case.
“We are guided by the science, which supports the safety of Johnson’s Baby Powder,” a J&J spokesperson told Bloomberg. “We are preparing for additional trials in the US, and we will continue to defend the safety of Johnson’s Baby Powder.”
Bloomberg, which tallies large verdicts and settlements, says that yesterday’s jury verdict was the third-largest of 2017. The largest (for $500 million) was ZeniMax’s February win against Facebook over its virtual reality headset.
via Ars Technica
Jury awards $417M to woman who says she got cancer from talc in baby powder
Five Handguns I Can’t Live Without
by Austin Knudsen
I don’t read as many gun magazines as I used to. But there are a few articles that are seared into my memory. One such article was written several years ago by Sheriff Jim Wilson: a countdown of the five handguns he couldn’t live without. So I thought, why reinvent the wheel? Let’s go down that rabbit hole again! If I’m forced to get rid of all but five handguns (the horror…) which would I keep? In no particular order…
1. Smith & Wesson Model 17 .22LR
When new shooters ask me what gun they should buy, I recommend a .22LR. I tell them to shoot it, shoot it, and shoot it some more. There’s simply no better way to become a proficient shooter. They’re fun and cheap to shoot. You can learn all of the fundamentals of handgun shooting without the expense and recoil of bigger calibers.
This Smith & Wesson Model 17 — known by S&W-er’s as a “K-22” — was my first handgun. Dad gave it me when I was a teenager. I lost count of the gophers this baby has dispatched. Not to brag, but I’m a crack shot with this wheel gun.
After 20 years of carry and use, 10-round Model 17-8 went back to the factory for a new cylinder. The original alloy cylinder went kaput due to a poor ratchet/timing design on this particular engineering run (during the Clinton-era, bad ol’ days of Smith). It now sports a stainless steel 10-shot cylinder with redesigned ratchet, fitted at no cost.
Even though the stainless cylinder looks a little jarring on that blued frame, this old girl still shoots as well as ever. The 10-shot cylinder means I’m not spending as much time reloading. The six-inch barrel, excellent S&W target sights and perfect single action trigger (I’ve hardly ever fired it double action) make this little gem my absolute favorite handgun in the world. While you can make a good argument for your Ruger MKII/III/IV or Browning Buck Mark, this is the handgun that made me a handgunner and a revolver man for life.
The medium-framed .357 Magnum revolver may be the most versatile handgun (firearm?) ever made. It can be loaded with light .38 specials for pleasure and target shooting, or full-bore .357 magnums in 125-158 grain hollow points for personal defense, or heavy-loaded with hard cast lead bullets in the 173-180 grain range for wilderness use. Hell, you can load it with shot shells.
Introduced in 1980, the Smith & Wesson L frame was designed specifically for the .357 Magnum cartridge. This after Smith learned that extensive use of hot magnum loads through .357 Magnum chambered K frames (models 13, 19, 65, 66) ditched out more abuse than the smaller K-frames could handle.
Beefier than the K frame but not as massive as the N frame, the L frame models could take the steady pounding of heavy .357 magnum loads and keep on ticking.
For the first time in its production history S&W installed full underlugged barrels on the L frames. This was a fairly blatant marketing jab at the Colt Python, S&W’s biggest competitor in the police service revolver market at the time.
My 686 spent the first decade in my possession as a 8 3/8-inch barreled behemoth that shot almost nothing except bulk 158 grain lead semi-wadcutter .38 specials. I used it to keep the exploding, destructive beaver population on our place in check. Later, I re-barreled the wheel gun to 4 inches – much easier to carry and better balance – and carried it as my concealed weapon for a few years before I had any gray hair. Or brains.
The double action trigger is smooth and consistent. The single action trigger is, in a word, magnificent. Nowadays, the 686 is still one of my go-to, on-the-farm, around-the-yard handguns and is my usual sidearm of choice when I’m deer or upland bird hunting in northeast Montana.
In the summer months, I keep the first two chambers loaded with CCI shot shells to dispatch the inevitable rattlesnakes around the farmyard, and the other four are usually loaded with lead 158 grain .38 special handloads. While it may not be as sexy as the newest striker fired semi-auto, the six-shot .357 Magnum revolver will teach you to slow down, aim steady and make your shots count.
3. Smith & Wesson 1911sc E-series .45ACP
The third handgun I owned was an old imported surplus Argentine Colt 1911 with an arched mainspring housing, tiny sights and a spur hammer that bit the web of my hand and made it bleed every time I shot it. I now own a couple of modern 911s that rectify those problems, The version that really blows my skirt up: Smith & Wesson’s lightweight framed, round-butted, commander length version, the S&W 1911sc E-series.
The 4¼-inch commander length pistol is easier to carry and conceal, while avoiding the reliability problems that can plague 1911s with shorter barrels. The frame is made of a lightweight aluminum/scandium alloy, making it a) lighter than the original steel frame, and b) more durable than a pure aluminum frame.
Smith & Wesson also rounded the frame; a modification that used to be strictly custom. This modified frame has two benefits: 1) it makes the pistol a little less likely to print under a concealed carry garment and 2) it makes the pistol even more comfortable in the hand, a feat that I didn’t think possible when it comes to the already-comfortable 1911 platform.
The 1911sc comes standard with Novak-style Trijicon tritium night sights and all the features we expect today on a standard 1911. I added the short trigger and strong side-only safety based on my own personal preferences, and replaced some of the more breakage-prone MIM parts (yes, I’ve witnessed it, though not in this gun) with machined Ed Brown parts. And yes, those are Dan Wesson Guardian grips.
The 1911sc is now in my regular concealed carry rotation. While not as light as a polymer 9mm pistol, it’s a good 10 oz. or lighter than a full-size, all steel 1911, yet still holds as many rounds and uses the same magazines. After carrying a full size 1911 on your hip for a few days, you’ll begin to notice the weight and appreciate something lighter, but which offers you the same feel, controls, capacity, and reliability of the 1911.
4. Ruger Blackhawk .45 Colt
In case you hadn’t guessed, I’m a revolver man first and foremost. At some point, I discovered the writings of an old Montana cowboy named Elmer Keith, the father of the .44 Magnum cartridge, the .41 Magnum cartridge, the Smith & Wesson models 29 and 57 revolvers, the .338 Winchester Magnum cartridge and the Winchester model 70 rifle. (How’s that for a pedigree?)
As a Keith disciple, I shot and reloaded the .44 Magnum for years, using Keith’s personal 250-grain lead bullet design (a modified semi-wadcutter, Lyman mould 429421). The round was cast, sized and lubed by my own hands and propelled by 21 grains of Alliant 2400 (Keith’s pet load) from of a Smith & Wesson model 629 revolver.
And then I stumbled upon the writings of a Wyoming gunsmith named John Linebaugh.
Linebaugh argued that, given a strong enough revolver, a heavily loaded .45 Colt could do anything the .44 Magnum could do with less internal case pressures. This point intrigued me, as I had seen plenty of pictures of exploded .44 Magnum revolvers, and their oftentimes injured owners, caused by reloaders pushing the pressure limits of the cartridge and their guns. So I started experimenting with heavy .45 Colt loads.
My heavy .45 Colt loads (which should only be fired from modern revolvers) consist of a 290 grain lead semi wadcutter bullet cast from RCBS mould 45-270-SAA, and 18.5 grains of Alliant 2400. It outperforms many factory .44 Magnum loads available. The recoil is substantial, though not as vicious as a hot .44 Magnum. I have no hesitation carrying this load into grizzly country, and should I have to clear leather on one of the big bruins, this load will do the job.
My heavy revolver of choice is the Ruger Blackhawk with a 5 ½” barrel.
The 5½” barrel length is short enough to carry all day and clear a holster, but still long enough to get good performance out of the load. If you’ve hiked while carrying heavy, 7+ inch barreled revolvers as much as I have, you learn after a few mountains that you might as well be carrying a boat anchor on your hip.
The Blackhawk’s aluminum grip frame and fluted cylinder (as opposed to the Super Blackhawk’s steel grip frame and unfluted cylinder) shaves weight from an already heavy gun, and makes a big difference when you’re packing it all day.
I prefer the Blackhawk’s single-action grip frame design for heavy loads like these. The single action grip design “pivots” in your hand under heavy recoil, as opposed to the double-action grip that delivers all of that recoil straight back into your palm. It’s like getting smacked in the palm of your hand with the business end of a baseball bat.
The Blackhawk’s robust, adjustable sights can be tailored for any load and are still tough enough to survive a week’s pack trip in the Bob Marshall Wilderness. And finally: ‘Murica. Nothing is more American than a single-action, blued revolver with pretty wood grips.
5. GLOCK 19
For decades, I swore I’d never own a GLOCK. I thought they were boxy, ugly, and utterly un-gun-like.That goofy steep grip angle just felt wrong, and there was no way plastic could possibly be as good as blue steel and wood. Plus, I had very little use for the 9mm cartridge at that point in my life.
At the urging of a friend, I bought a GLOCK 19 (Gen 3) to prove myself right. I carried that G19 almost every day for nearly four years. I carried it openly on the farm, crawling over fences, on horseback, on dirt bikes, on the tractor, and laying in the dirt servicing and repairing heavy equipment. I carried it concealed under a t-shirt, under a suit jacket, and under a winter coat.
I shot it — a lot — at everything from steel targets to skunks to rattlesnakes. And I’ll be damned if that GLOCK didn’t become one of the few guns with which I trust my life. The 19 has never bobbled, hiccupped or jammed on me (aside from some improperly sized reloaded rounds), despite minimal maintenance.
I’ll admit that my G19 has had some work done. It’s had a trigger job by a GLOCK armorer because stock GLOCK triggers suck. I gave it a set of Warren Sevigny Tactical fiber optic sights because stock GLOCK sights suck. And I had the grip reduced and the backstrap straightened by Springer Precision because the backstrap “hump” hit my hand wrong.
Now, you couldn’t pry my GLOCK 19 from my warm, living hands. This pistol taught me to never say never, and don’t knock it until you try it. I now own multiple GLOCK 9mms, including a 34 for competition, a 43 for deep concealment, and a 17 just because everyone should own a GLOCK 17. I probably shoot them more than any other pistols I own. And to add insult to my injury, I shoot them really well. That’s what I get for saying I’d never own a GLOCK.
So, that’s my list of the five handguns I couldn’t live without. What does your list look like?
The solar eclipse produced some fantastic photos—here are our favorites
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On Monday, Ars writers shared some thoughts with readers about the total solar eclipse that spanned the United States and took some backyard photographs of the event. But let’s be honest; none of us are professional photographers, and we didn’t possess the right equipment to do the celestial event justice.
Fortunately, there’s a space agency for that. Two, even. And on Monday NASA and the European Space Agency deployed their resources on the ground and in space to capture the eclipse, doing so in stunning fashion. This gallery highlights everything from the International Space Station transiting the Sun during the eclipse, to astronauts on board the station itself taking pictures of the event back on Earth.
Listing image by NASA/Aubrey Gemignani
via Ars Technica
The solar eclipse produced some fantastic photos—here are our favorites
Study: 0% Of People Die From Getting Fingers Lodged In Bowling Ball And Being Dragged Down Lane
WASHINGTON—Saying the deadly mishap had no impact whatsoever on mortality rates in any demographic, a new Pew Research Center study released Tuesday found that zero percent of people die from getting their fingers lodged in a bowling ball and being dragged down the lane. “Our sample of 10,000 Americans found that on average, zero out of 100 people die from getting their fingers stuck in a bowling ball, being yanked onto the lane when they throw their arm forward, and launching headfirst into the pins,” said researcher Sarah Wheatman, noting that skull fractures and other head traumas resulting from such collisions were found on not a single occasion. “As no one has been carried the length of their lane into the pins by the momentum of their bowling ball, it is also necessarily true that not a single person left a 7-10 split after doing so. Our study also confirms that 0 percent of deaths resulted in the person’s body being cleared from the bowling lane by the sweeper before the pins were reset.” Wheatman went on to say, however, that approximately 50 percent of individuals suffer bruises and other minor injuries after their bowling ball pulls them halfway down the lane.
via The Onion
Study: 0% Of People Die From Getting Fingers Lodged In Bowling Ball And Being Dragged Down Lane
Today’s Solar Eclipse Left a Path of Nightmarish Traffic in Its Wake
For months, even years, amateur astronomers, photographers, and anyone wanting the best possible view of today’s solar eclipse have been planning trips into the phenomenon’s path of totality. Now that it’s over, all that’s left are millions of grainy Instagram photos—and a traffic nightmare that traces the same path as the eclipse’s shadow.
Twitter’s @dicktoblerone appears to have been the first to spot this fallout, which is clearly visible on Google Maps’ live traffic feature. The country’s most clogged asphalt arteries can currently be found in the Southeast, which would have been the last region to see the total eclipse in the sky. The traffic may have been equally awful in the Northwest a bit earlier, but it appears to have cleared up.
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The next time a total solar eclipse will be visible in the United States is on April 8th, 2024, giving you plenty time to find a house somewhere near the shadow’s path, so you won’t have to deal with traffic nightmares like these seven years from now.
[Twitter @dicktoblerone via Twitter @lanewinfield]
via Gizmodo
Today’s Solar Eclipse Left a Path of Nightmarish Traffic in Its Wake
Miss the totality? Google Maps will make you feel better.
Earlier today, millions of Americans flocked to a strip of land about 70 miles wide, stretching from Portland, Oregon to Columbia, South Carolina, to view a once-a-decade total solar eclipse.
Now the totality is over, and everyone is trying to go home. And as these screenshots from Google maps demonstrate, it’s causing traffic jams on North-South interstates throughout the path of the totality:
Read on Ars Technica | Comments
via Ars Technica
Miss the totality? Google Maps will make you feel better.
How to Configure Aurora RDS Parameters
In this blog post, we’ll look at some tips on how to configure Aurora RDS parameters.
I was recently deploying a few Aurora RDS instances, a process very similar to configuring a regular RDS instance. I noticed a few minor differences in the way you configure Aurora RDS parameters, and very few articles on how the commands should be structured (for RDS as well as Aurora). The only real literature available is the official Amazon RDS documentation.
This blog provides a concise “how-to” guide to quickly change Aurora RDS parameters using the AWS CLI. Aurora retains the parameter group model introduced with RDS, with new instances having the default read only parameter groups. For a new instance, you need to create and allocate a new parameter group (this requires a DB reboot). After that, you can apply changes to dynamic variables immediately. In other words, the first time you add the DB parameter group you’ll need to reboot even if the variable you are configuring is dynamic. It’s best to create a new DB parameter group when initializing your clusters. Nothing stops you from adding more than one host to the same DB Parameter Group rather than creating one per instance.
In addition to the DB Parameter Group, each instance is also allocated a DB Cluster Parameter Group. The DB Parameter Group is used for instance-level parameters, while the DB Cluster Parameter Group is used for cluster-level parameters (and applies to all instances in a cluster). You’ll find some of the MySQL engine variables can only be found in the DB Cluster Parameter Group. Here you will find a handy reference of all the DB cluster and DB instance parameters that are viewable or configurable for Aurora instances.
To run these commands, you’ll need to have the “aws” cli tool installed and configured. Note that the force-failover option used for RDS instances doesn’t apply to Aurora. You should perform either a controlled failover or let Aurora handle this. Also, the group family to use for Aurora is “oscar5.6”. The commands to set this up are as follows:
aws rds create-db-parameter-group --db-parameter-group-name percona-opt --db-parameter-group-family oscar5.6 --description "Percona Optimizations" aws rds modify-db-parameter-group --db-parameter-group-name percona-opt --parameters "ParameterName=max_connections,ParameterValue=5000,ApplyMethod=immediate" # For each instance-name: aws rds modify-db-instance --db-instance-identifier <instance-name> --db-parameter-group-name=percona-opt aws rds reboot-db-instance --db-instance-identifier <instance-name>
Once you create the initial DB parameter group, configure the variables as follows:
aws rds modify-db-parameter-group --db-parameter-group-name <instance-name> --parameters "ParameterName=max_connect_errors,ParameterValue=999999,ApplyMethod=immediate" aws rds modify-db-parameter-group --db-parameter-group-name <instance-name> --parameters "ParameterName=max_connect_errors,ParameterValue=999999,ApplyMethod=immediate" ## Verifying change: aws rds describe-db-parameters --db-parameter-group-name aurora-instance-1 | grep -B7 -A2 'max_connect_errors'
Please keep in mind, it can take a few seconds to propagate changes to nodes. Give it a moment before checking the values with “show global variables”. You can configure the DB Cluster Parameter group similarly, for example:
# Create a new db cluster parameter group aws rds create-db-cluster-parameter-group --db-cluster-parameter-group-name percona-cluster --db-parameter-group-family oscar5.6 --description "new cluster group" # Tune a variable on the db cluster parameter group aws rds modify-db-cluster-parameter-group --db-cluster-parameter-group-name percona-cluster --parameters "ParameterName=innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit,ParameterValue=2,ApplyMethod=immediate" # Allocate the new db cluster parameter to your cluster aws rds modify-db-cluster --db-cluster-identifier <cluster_identifier> --db-cluster-parameter-group-name=percona-cluster # And of course, for viewing the cluster parameters aws rds describe-db-cluster-parameters --db-cluster-parameter-group-name=percona-cluster
I hope you find this article useful, please make sure to share with the community!
via MySQL Performance Blog
How to Configure Aurora RDS Parameters
How to Shoot a Bow and Arrow
For thousands of years, humans have used the bow and arrow for hunting and warfare. Today, you can buy bows equipped with devices and sights to help you aim accurately and hit a bull’s-eye almost every time they’re drawn. For example, with a fixed pin sight, an archer has a guide that shows how to adjust his aim to ensure he hits the target no matter the distance.
But ancient archers had to learn how to aim without sights. This skill — called instinctive shooting — requires years of trial and error to master. Through consistent practice, the body and mind intuitively learn how to adjust the aim of the bow to accommodate different shooting distances. Instinctive shooting is a lot like throwing a baseball or shooting a basketball. Once you’ve practiced these skills, you don’t really think about aiming when you throw a baseball to someone or shoot a basket. You just do it. Somehow your mind and body are able to calculate the right angle and force to throw the ball to ensure it hits your target, or at least gets very close.
Because of the mind-body connection inherent to traditional archery, ancient archers — particularly those from China — often used the bow as a philosophical metaphor. For example, Confucius was an archery teacher and used the practice as an analogy for wu-wei, or effortless action. To successfully shoot a bow and arrow intuitively, you’ve got to try not to try, because the moment you start trying too hard to aim, you end up missing the target completely. So it goes in life as well.
The funny thing about instinctive bow shooting and this whole idea of trying not to try is that to get to that state, you’ve got to be intensely mindful and deliberate about it. You’ve got to try to try, before you can try not to try.
If instinctive archery sounds like something you could get into, but the last time you shot a bow and arrow was at summer camp as a kid, today we break down the steps of instinctively shooting a bow and arrow. With time and practice, your archery will hopefully hit a state of wu-wei, or effortless action.
How to Instinctively Shoot a Bow and Arrow
While it is possible to instinctively shoot a compound bow, the practice is most associated with traditional archery — that is, archery that uses recurve bows or longbows. For the purposes of this article, we’ll be showing how to instinctively shoot with a traditional bow.
Assume a Relaxed Stance
Stand with your shoulders perpendicular to your target with your feet shoulder-width apart. From here, you’ve got two options on how to place your feet. If you’re just starting out, a squared stance — in which both your feet are parallel to the shooting line — is the way to go, as it will ensure that you consistently set up in the same way.
After some practice, you might consider experimenting with an open/oblique stance. With an open stance, the lead foot points towards the target. This stance is good if you’re on uneven ground, and it helps prevent you from overdrawing your bow. The downside is that because it rotates your hips towards the target, when you do draw back, you have a tendency to just use your arms instead of your back muscles.
If you’re a rank beginner, go with the squared stance.
Nock the Arrow
Place the arrow shaft on the arrow rest of your bow. Attach the arrow’s nock — the plastic, grooved part at the arrow’s end — to the bow string. Your bow string should have 1-2 nock locators that indicate where the arrow should be placed, and ensure that you consistently nock your arrow at the same place each time you shoot. If your string has just one locator, nock your arrow just beneath the bead. If it has two locators, nock the arrow between the two beads.
Grip the Bow Correctly
Place the bow in your non-dominant hand. You want the grip of the bow to rest right on the pad of your thumb. This placement will ensure that you don’t squeeze the bow too tightly, which would cause it to torque inwards, throwing off accuracy, and would also place your forearm in-line with the string; if you’re not wearing an armguard, it’s going to hurt when you release it.
A good cue to know if your grip is right is to check to see if your knuckles create a 45-degree angle to the bow grip. If your hand is in that position, you likely have the bow placed on the pad of your thumb.
Squeeze the grip like you’re shaking a hand. Not too hard and not too lightly.
How to Grip the Bow String
With your arrow nocked, and your bow hand gripping the bow correctly, we’re ready to grip the bowstring.
There are different ways to grip a bowstring but for the purposes of this article, we’ll be highlighting the Mediterranean method, as it’s the easiest way for beginners.
With the Mediterranean grip, we’ll be using three fingers — index, middle, and ring — to pull the bowstring back. The bowstring should rest in the groove of your top knuckles. The arrow’s nock should be between your index and middle finger. If that’s uncomfortable for you at first, feel free to put all three fingers beneath the arrow’s shaft.
If you’re just starting out, pulling a bowstring back with your bare fingers can be uncomfortable and even painful. Consider using a finger tab, which is a piece of leather that protects your fingers from the bowstring. You can also wear gloves if you want.
Prep Your Draw
We’re almost ready to draw the bow back. But before we do, we want to make sure the bow is in the right place for the most efficient draw. To do so, simply lift the arm holding the bow so that the arm is at shoulder height. Once you’re there, it’s time to….
Draw the Bow String Back
When most folks draw a bowstring back, they want to use their arms. This will only tire you out and cause you to under-draw the string — that is, not pull it back far enough. When you draw a bowstring back, you want to use your back muscles. Imagine squeezing your shoulder blades together. That cue will help ensure you’re using your back muscles and not your arm or shoulder muscles to draw the bowstring back.
Anchor the String
How far should you draw your bowstring? To your anchor point. An anchor point is a reference point on your face that you draw the string to in order to ensure that you draw it the same way each time. There are a few anchor points you can create. Your anchor point could be a spot on your nose. If that’s the case, you draw the string until it touches that certain spot on your nose. Or your anchor point could be your index finger touching the corner of your mouth.
Whatever you decide to be your anchor point, fix it in stone and consistently draw your bowstring until you’ve reached that spot.
Aim
Aim the point of your arrow at your target. Don’t overthink the aiming. Remember wu-wei — try not to try. The harder you try, the more elusive your target becomes.
Release and Follow Through
Keeping your bow arm steady, simply push your fingers on the bowstring out of the way of the string. The string will snap forward and your arrow will start to fly.
But shooting an arrow doesn’t stop at the release. Just as you must follow through when throwing a baseball to accurately throw the ball, you need to follow through with your arrow release. After you’ve let the bowstring go, your draw hand should continue moving backwards until it reaches the bottom of your ears. This movement will also naturally cause the bow to tilt forward a bit. Let it. This follow-through ensures that all the energy in the bow is transferred cleanly to the arrow.
Practice, Practice, Practice
Well, there you go. The basics of instinctively shooting a bow and arrow. Like any skill, you’ll get better at it the more you work on it. With enough time, you’ll eventually reach a state of effortless action with your archery, and who knows, perhaps a little of this wu-wei will carry over to the rest of your life as well!
The post How to Shoot a Bow and Arrow appeared first on The Art of Manliness.
After “Game of Thrones” Capes Revaled to Be Ikea Rugs, Ikea Releases How-To Instructions
Here’s a 10-second clip of "Game of Thrones" costume designer Michele Clapton revealing where the capes of the Night’s Watch come from:
Apparently folks were titillated that Ikea rugs were the source material.
So too was someone at Ikea, who then had whomever’s in charge of producing Ikea’s assembly directions create one for the cape:
Yanks are out of luck; the Skold sheepskin rug pictured above isn’t available in the ‘States. (The image is from Ikea’s Australian website.)
via Core77
After “Game of Thrones” Capes Revaled to Be Ikea Rugs, Ikea Releases How-To Instructions