Gents:
Used to hear the ‘old wives tale’ that said shooting a yew bow in the cold will break it. I live in the northeast US, where the temperature one night was 28-degrees F outside, or ~ -2C. My SUV had been used so was warmer than being cold. I headed out to my Archery Club’s indoor range that is 20-minutes away, but I did make one stop of no more than 5-10 minutes (car shut off).
Whilst driving, I put the yew ELB across the rear seat as I intentionally didn’t want the heater that blows out from the front seat to harm the bow. Whilst driving the car inside was warm, not below freezing. I took the bow right into the range & let it warm up some & even hand-runner it all over before stringing it, then did a series of 1/2-draws from my left (I’m lefty) and right sides, to warm me AND the bow up.
Used same arrows matched to the bow using the ‘shoot 3 fletched & 3 bare shaft’ method to ensure all arrows hit the same spot. They do, from ~5-yards out to 20 or more. But this night, I noticed a fishtail upon release that I had never seen before. I put the bow on the same scale it was initially tested on (43-pounds) and it now read 49-pounds, checking it 3 times.
The bow is OK, and I shot a 2nd bow ... “just because” ... but what are your thoughts or comments? Would a yew selfbow, even one nicely finished ... weigh or scale that much differently than whence 1st tested when it was likely 80-degrees F outside (~27-degrees C)? Note I have not shot nor tested it since.
Thoughts?