Welcome to me new blog- no.3! The
first is my wargaming blog. Second a selling blog. Now this one!
Why am I doing this? I've noticed that
archery and LARP are rather strange bedfellows in the UK. So this
blog is about my experiences, although I'm very open to other
contributors.
How did I start? School, 5th
form and a pile of horrendous equipment. I was hooked. Family trip
to Cardiff, a sports shop and a £7 fibreglass bow. I was starting
work the next week and borrowed it off mum. Now we lived a
hand-to-mouth existence, so that was the rent money.
I progressed, got more kit. Now this
is pre-internet, so I ordered from Quicks or visited a specialist
retailers like Tom Foy and Lillywhites in London. First longbow,
over a year delivery and £100, say 3 weeks wages.
Young chap living at home messing with
wargaming and archery. At age 17 I was required to teach my sister.
She's a natural shot and soon required proper tuition. An archery
club*, she became Dorset junior champion, I got chucked out!
The combination of hobbies brought
Philip Mackie and Tony Pidgeon into my life, and they're still here.
Tony being my regular wargaming partner today.
Reenactment. That was Phil's fault, he
dragged me to an event in Longleat. He was doing Napoleonic, but
there was the Norse Film and Pageant Society. Hang on, they have
archers! And they're shooting people! Voom. Longbows, combat,
arrow making (tried bowyery-total fail) British Plate Armour Society
and even my own Fastoft's 1,000 archery-heavy society. I taught
armed combat and archery for a few decades.
Work, business taking up 60-80 hours a
week saw the end of that. But now, retirement gives me the time and
some money to get into LARP. Way back when I booked Arrowcaster for
an event at Shugborough Hall and got a crossbow in exchange. Great,
got used for shoot-the-knight have-a-go stalls, ideal for youngsters
and handicapped unable to pull a bow. But- the design is, well,
flawed and getting it to launch a bolt with any power is beyond me-.
*Her tutor was an amazing chap,
climbing trees and not showing his advanced years. He had an amazing
war. During WW2, the government used the medieval laws to call up
young archers. He was part of that trawl and trained for the Beach
Clearance Squads. Wearing a wet suit and equipped with a steel bow
his job was to protect the engineers who surveyed and sampled the
invasion beaches prior to D Day. If disturbed by a sentry, or anyone
else, he would dispatch them and take their bodies out to sea.
Come D Day he was one of the first
on the beaches and they were returning in their old fishing boat.
Every boat yelled “you're going the wrong way!” To get a reply
of “F-we've done our bit!”
The Army in their wisdom sent him to
the LRPG where he got a halftrack by shooting the driver through the
vision slit. The vehicle promptly rolled over and they rushed in
with knives. No bullet wounds, burnt out – an unfortunate
accident.
I don't remember you screaming objections about going to the Longleat historical weekend. I do recall your saying can I shoot her when the lady poet started spouting dull poetry when being rowed onto the lake.
ReplyDeleteIt was an interesting weekend and joining the North Film & Pagent Society fir their display seemed like a mistake when the archers got charged by a screaming mob of Vikings with axes. Happy days!
I'd forgotten her! I do remember the organisers assistant, though-. And our mad trip with Para John. No-one believes me when I tell them-.
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