Points to the Cross

Points to the Cross Points to the Cross is a full service archery club and association with JOAD (Jr. Olympic Archery Development) and Sr.

Olympic Training Programs, ASAP, Camp programs, educational and certification courses.

04/15/2021

We’ve had a bunch of inquiries as to if and when we will begin classes this year. At this time we have scheduled classes beginning the first week in May on Tuesdays (May 4th ) and Thursdays (May 6th) and ending June 29th (Tuesdays) and July 1st (Thursdays), with a 2 week “no class” period (May 18th – May 27th); total 7 weeks. Please keep in mind that the minimum age to start any of our programs is 10 years old.

The schedule would be Tuesdays and Thursdays with shooting times at 4:00-5:00 and 6:00-7:00; a total of a 7 week session. Price $110 with your own equipment; $140 to use club equipment. There will be NO MAKE UP classes.

A registration completed registration form is required. Please email us for a registration form.

Registration and payment deadline is April 22, 2021.

Acceptable payment options:
cash, check, Venmo to pointstothecross
Zelle (free) and PayPal (add 5% processing fee) to [email protected]

TUESDAY GROUP SESSION
Times: 4:00-5:00 and 6:00-7:00
5/4, 5/11, 6/1, 6/8, 6/15, 6/22, 6/29 __________ __________

THURSDAY GROUP SESSION
Times: 4:00-5:00 and 6:00-7:00
5/6, 5/13, 6/3, 6/10, 6/17, 6/24, 7/1 __________ __________

We will be following the current Covid-19 state protocols and USA Archery “competition” guidelines as follows:

Classes would be no greater than 10 people with 2 people per target (A/B line).

It would be strongly encouraged that each archer has their own equipment (approved by our Coach). If you do not have your own equipment or approved equipment, you can be fitted and purchased through us. But, if that is not possible, the use of club equipment will be available, however, on a very limited basis.

The use of club equipment such as bows (bow strings), arm guards, finger tabs, and arrows will be used only by one particular archer class time; no sharing equipment. All club equipment (including tabs, arm guards, and strings) will be sanitized before and after each class.

It is still required by NYS and local health authorities, at this time, that everyone with access to the range wears a face covering when not on the shooting line. Please bring your own masks and hand sanitizers (to use when getting arrows or whenever you are not on the shooting line).

In order to accommodate the limited group size allowed by the existing Covid19 standards, additional spectators will not be allowed; 1 parent per minor archer.

Archers (and parents) will have to bring their own chairs and keep adequate space between other archers and/or parents.

We encourage people to do anything that require the bathroom to do so prior to coming. We will make our bathroom available and it will be sanitized before and after use.

Medical Precautions: If you have been in contact with someone with a confirmed case of COVID-19, stay home. If you are feeling unwell, have a fever or cough, stay home. If you or a family member have travelled or been in an area that has a high density of cases and/or has other medical restrictions, it is advised to stay home. High-risk and immunocompromised individuals are also encouraged to stay home. If you’ve received the vaccine(s), please let us know; it’ll make target assignments a bit easier.

We encourage each person to take your temperature before class; if you or a member in your home has a temperature of 100.4F or higher to not come. If you feel unwell or are unsure, please be sure to have your temperature checked or just stay home.

Staying healthy and safe,

Sue and Doug Ludwig

02/06/2021

Only One Option

Habakkuk 2:4

"Behold, his soul which is lifted up is not upright in him: but the just shall live by his faith."

If you were to ask several people to draw a crooked line on a piece of paper, no two lines would be identical. There is a lesson in this: There are many ways to be crooked, but only one way to be straight.

The Lord tells us that the righteous person has only one option to: “live by his faith” (Habakkuk 2:4). In the chapter prior to this declaration from the Lord, the prophet Habakkuk had complained about the violence and injustice around him. It seemed as if the wicked were swallowing up the righteous: "But you are pure and cannot stand the sight of evil. Will you wink at their treachery? Should you be silent while the wicked swallow up people more righteous than they?(Habakkuk 1:13)

God responded to Habakkuk by saying that His people were to be “just” and were to live by faith. They were not to be like the one who is “proud” and “not upright” "Behold, his soul which is lifted up is not upright in him: but the just shall live by his faith." (Habakkuk 2:4)

A proud and self-sufficient person will rationalize his faults and imperfections. He doesn’t want to admit that he needs God. His ways are crooked. Wickedness seems to prevail in our world. God urges us to live our lives in faith, taking to heart His assurance to Habakkuk that there will be a day of reckoning for the wicked.

The only way to please God now and to be ready for that day of reckoning is to live by faith:

Our Prayer Should Be

"Lord, grant me grace throughout this day; to walk the straight and narrow way; To do whatever in Thy sight and Is good and perfect, just and right."

Prayer by Huisman

The only right way is the straight and narrow way.

Beautiful rainbow on the range!
09/23/2019

Beautiful rainbow on the range!

These are pictures that appear on our website
06/16/2018

These are pictures that appear on our website

06/16/2018

Check out our beautiful location in Fairport

It's camp season!  Come join us for this mutli-martial arts camp!  Yes, archery is a martial art!
04/28/2018

It's camp season! Come join us for this mutli-martial arts camp! Yes, archery is a martial art!

03/22/2018

Why do I need an archery coach?

The Coach and Athlete Relationship

Because archery is such a technical sport, “drop-in” coaching sessions are rarely effective. Someone hoping to help you improve as an archer must see you over a period of time, see how you react to practice and tournament pressure, and see how you incorporate new knowledge and techniques. This requires a commitment of time and energy from both you and your coach.

The ties you develop with your coach are essential to your advancement in the sport. Any critique (positive or negative) during training is accepted much better when trust exists. Trust is developed when your coach’s credentials (successes) are accepted. In most cases, the coach’s reputation will suffice as coaching credentials; however, you might not accept at face value a coach’s success for this validation or trust. Whatever the case, the relationship grows or founders based on whether you benefit by following the path worked out between the two of you. If you commit to excellence with your attention, time, action, and communication, you should expect to see a positive effect. For example, if upon inspection of your equipment, your coach suggests changes in setup or tune, you should be willing to commit the time to make these changes and test them out. If the result of the changes is better scores, the relationship between you and your coach is strengthened. In archery, the target is the final arbiter. As the relationship is strengthened, trust grows, and you become more willing to take greater risks to get better. The 2000 Olympic gold medalist, Simon Fairweather, rebuilt his shot from the ground up at the advice of his coach only a year and a half before the Olympic Games. Such daring can only happen when there is absolute trust in that relationship.

A coach’s relationship with an archer is often referred to as rapport. The typical coach/athlete relationship is that of older (wiser) person to younger (less experienced) person. You and your coach become a training team. In this team, which may include others (such as your parents if you are a younger archer), age is not an issue; experience and coaching ability defines your coach’s effectiveness. The objective of your coach, as a member of the team, is exclusively for the team to attain its goals. Regardless of whether your coach is paid for services, his or her role and responsibility is your success first and foremost. To achieve this, your coach must keep all aspects of the developed trust within the confines of the team. The only exception to this is if a qualified sport psychologist becomes a member of your team.

The training of a coach is often a long and arduous process requiring many hours of tutelage under more experienced coaches. The NAA’s coach training program has five levels. Only at Level 3 do coaches become qualified to work with individual archers. The Level 4 coaches are national team-level coaches, and they have four sublevels to work through (4A through 4D). Each level or sublevel requires additional training and experience (and cost!). Coaches need to seek out as much archery knowledge by reading the literature on the development of archery skill and consulting with more experienced coaches and archers as they can. At other times coaches may need to compromise, politick, and work in less than ideal circumstances. Overall, a coach’s skill will consist of archery technique knowledge, honesty, communication skills, equipment knowledge, and archery resources.

Your parents or spouse play a major part in your training. These relationships have much deeper, more longstanding ties than any coach could expect to develop. These people are important in your life, spend extended time with you, are more of a mentor figure than your coach, may have goals different from yours, or may have conflicting coaching philosophies. They should not be ignored, but rather should be an integral part of the training plans for the team. Thus, coaches do not work with just archers. They work with the archer’s team.

Coaches consider archers to be athletes. Athletes are like all other humans. They respond to positive reinforcement of accomplished performances. When a perceived mentor critiques an athlete, the athlete’s natural response is to perform in a manner that solicits more praise and less criticism. Thus, a coach, as a perceived mentor, is an athlete trainer. Archer-athletes use coaches primarily to get better faster and to learn from their experiences. Just as archer-athletes use other training aids, they use coaches to advance their training.

By Claudia Stevenson and Steve Ruis

This is our 5th year. Come try out a new kind of camp this summer!
02/01/2018

This is our 5th year. Come try out a new kind of camp this summer!

Address

Penfield, NY
14526

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