Noth smiled and shrugged after a bit of laughter,
"Good, yes my vani is bad. Still learning, takes time you blasted raccoon! Now, less lip, more study, yes?"Sighing loudly Antar took another sip of warm tea letting the warm swill pervade his senses as it traveled down to his stomach. He let out a warm smile towards the man he was here to teach. Taking out his quiver and the arrows contained in it, the rogue would show it to the man,
"Good answer , especially for a start, but don't expect to ever stop learning in a craft like archery. It's one of the few things that your survival depends on the basis of your equipment. Though Like any craft, the skill to use the equipment starts with a single first step. In this example, how to draw an arrow properly and knock it to a bow. For that we should go outside , back to the range. Just hold still a moment, I have to make sure you know how to walk and move with the equipment before I get you to start shooting."Taking his quiver, Antar removed about half the arrows, and then proceeded to clip the artifice of the trade to Coren's belt. The quiver only held ten arrows, he would hold the other in his hand; but the real conundrum would be next. Looking towards Coren again, the teacher put two hands on Coren's shoulders and then to the bow he held, something he borrowed no doubt. Antar ran a finger along the string
" As you move with your kit, it will seem alien at first, a quiver, unless it's a strapped climber's quiver will shift and unbalance at times, so your stride must take that into effect until your ability to balance it all improves. But first I'll show you an important thing, how to regrease a bow."Taking out two tallow balls from his pack, Antar placed one in Coren's hand.
"Warm this up first, until it becomes like putty, do as I do now. " Demonstrating, Antar took off his gloves to roll the ball in his palms, warming the tallow well.
"A bow's string should be greased and maintained every day. As well as an arrow, I'll show you how to make some hunting arrows from scratch another day, but for now, take the ball and press it against the string, letting the concoction grease the threads of the bow, the one you borrowed seems to have lamb's gut, which is a fine string to use, though you'll find tendons of goat or deer to work just as well. Intestinal tracks of more dangerous prey may be better to string a bow with as well, though they're rare to come by. Some isurian smiths may even create you a string from metal, though steel strings of the day are usually bound in a casing of lamb's gut."He handed Coren back his bow and took up his own. Making his motions slow and easy to follow. The ball of tallow was greased in a single direction, it was uncouthe to do it in cross directions. If one did that, one would see that the lifespan of the string would be reduced considerably from an uneven grease. He greased all four sides of the string, starting from the bow top down past the silencers and the tassles, moving them slightly to ensure that the entire strand was properly moistened. Tallow itself was a prime ingredient for the job as it served the same function as wax on a ceramic pot, glazing its surface away from the elements. The only problem with a string was that unlike a pot, wear and tear and exposure would make it loose its function over time.
If coren would ask about such things, he would receive an in depth explanation to show him why it was done just so at his own pace, in broken vani and common explanations to follow after. The rogue was making every effort to be clear and repeat himself.
Then, as a final lesson before Coren actually started walking out to the range, Antar would unstring his bow, and then restring it in the opposite fashioning of steps.
First, he stepped through the shaft of the bow, letting the arch of the shaft hang behind his back while he pressed the but end to the floor. Reaching upwards with one hand to the string, one hand to the weapon's wood; he'd use his body weight to help bend the shaft a little, decreasing the tension in the string.
For a longbow, amateur or not, this was one of the few ways to manually string a bow without a stringer, which consisted of a tensioned bit of rope tied to keep the bowshaft compressed. He'd explain such things as he went along, but for now his touch allowed him to pull the loop of oiled deergut out over the notch of his weapon, as once more his eyes noted the metal engraving within the guideplate... this had been her bow. The bow of a woman who had suffered just as much as he had, and had died in his arms, at his hands. An everpresent reminder for the need to get better in order to ensure one hit the proper target; though at the time, she had been the assassin's assigned mark. Her body used to cover up the group's connections to the job they had been paid for completing.
But he wouldn't go into such details with Coren. Instead he'd silently point out how he alligned the string, rebent the bow behind his calf, and then pulled the looped deergut back into place to let the tension return. The process of restringing a bow would be an important one for Coren to learn, as restringing it quickly would probably give him a chance to save his life.
When Coren's stumbling attempts to string his bow were completed, Antar guiding him to unstring and restring it
three times, taking care of knowing where the quiver hung at all times. Antar would situate the bow shaft behind his back in the carry an archer normally would have it in for short periods of time. Explaining that this type of carry for a bow was termed a "Hunter's position" and that a true archer would have to eventually learn to run with a full kit while it was in this setup. This was to keep the bow within easy reach when not secured in a bow sheathe; a special type of weapon sheathe strapped either to the hip or back.
With Coren setup with the odd interferences of an archer's kit, Antar would redon his gloves and walk him out to the archery range, staying two steps in front of him and to the write, walking heel to toe as he stretched his legs out in a "stalking gait." Something that was both useful in stealth
and in hunting. This was because the way the leg moved was a bit unnatural to the common person's stride. A lifting of the leg, to where the knee was arrayed perpinduclar to the hips, and the stretching out of the heel towards new ground, allowing the hunter to see where they placed their steps.
Coren would have to learn this simultaneously as he dealt with balancing the bow and the quiver of ten arrows. If he did it wrong, an arrow would slide out of the quiver, prompting Antar to stop mid-stride, clear his throat like a disappointed teacher as he physically pointed one finger at the offending dropped article of the craft the student was to pick up before continuing on.
Eventually when they made it to the archery line, then and only then would Antar work on the basic principles of drawing an arrow from a quiver, and knocking it correctly to a bow.
oocthank gawd for teaching archery to scouts for years X-x, it's surprising how much knowledge you get from RL. Isn't it? 