Boys and girls are taking aim
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Suzie Harrison
Archery is not necessarily the first thing that comes to mind when
thinking about sports, but it is one of the oldest sports known to
man. Some speculate that the first bows and arrows were crafted as
early as 50,000 BC.
Archery first appeared as a sport in the 1900 Olympics Games in
Paris. At the Laguna Beach Boys and Girls Club it made its debut
about two years ago.
On Tuesday afternoon, most of the kids at the club were focusing
on having fun and hitting the targets.
“The most important thing is to make sure it’s safe,” athletic
director Hans LaRoche said.
Armed with their blunt-point arrows -- a conical rubber arrow
point with a flat tip designed not to let the arrow penetrate a
target -- they shot at the targets set up at varied distances.
LaRoche gave words of encouragement, suggestions and hands-on help
for the newer archers.
“You’re shooting hard -- you need to aim,” he explained to one
boy.
He called out for them to freeze so they could safely pick up
their arrows to replenish for the next barrage.
“They really enjoy it, and it’s not that competitive,” LaRoche
said. “It doesn’t matter if you’re a boy or a girl or whatever age --
you get the technique down and feel really good about yourself.”
They used different size bows, smaller easier ones to pull for the
younger or less experienced children and bigger more advanced set ups
for the stronger participants.
“It was kind of easy to learn,” Gregory Simmons, 11, said. “It’s
fun when you first learn to put the arrow on the bow, pull it back
and then hit the target.”
Some of the arrows sailed the full length of the court, while
other rookie archers were pleased with their half-court efforts.
“This is my first time I’ve done it,” Daniel Rush, 8, said. April
Carlson, 9, said she has done it a couple of times and got the hang
of it right away. She said she likes the sound of the arrow when it
is first released -- its trajectory flight sound and its distinct,
hitting-the-target thud.
“I think archery is good because it gives you a lot of strength
and helps you with your aim,” April said.
Christianna Thebaud, 10, said it was her first archery experience,
and found that it was a lot of fun but kind of difficult in the
beginning.
“I keep doing it until I get the hang of it; it makes me
determined to do it more and work harder,” Christianna said. “The
hardest part is aiming at the right spot and shooting it with the
right strength you need.”
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