Pluck Yew
Imagine it’s Sunday morning, you’re getting on your Sunday Church clothes,
grabbing your bible, grabbing your rifle, and loading up a few
magazines for your rifle, pile everything into the car and off to church.
After church you get your rifle, and in the church yard, all the men have a
practice shoot in friendly semi-formal competition.
Every
man in the community is of course there (for both church and shooting) as
required by law.
Well,
that was
It’s
amazing what you sometimes learn. To start off, the archery program in
the schools (existing in N-K and planned for Central Springs in the future) is
a really neat program. The coaches really added something nice (I didn’t
have a thing to do with it). I did, however, get to drive a bus load of
N-K students to an archery competition where one of the girls took top overall
score. It was almost shades of merry old
In researching the bow for a couple different education
programs, especially how to build a bow and its early use, I came across the
reference to a familiar old symbol. The “peace sign” (palm out)
which used to be the “V” sign (with your palm facing in for victory during
WW2) might have had its earliest use in the middle ages. Bows were
commonly made from a wood called the Yew tree. English archers would
taunt their enemy (the French) by holding up two fingers (used to draw the bow)
as an imminent sign that you could expect a shower of arrows headed your
way. The sign was also known as “Pluck Yew” as you were about to pluck
the string of a yew bow.