Fred Bear® Grizzly Recurve Bow
- Laminated construction
- Durable weather- and scratch-resistant, satin gloss finish
- Generous shelf with BearHair™ arrow rest
- Length: 58"
These recurves are finished in satin gloss for all-weather, all-terrain protection. Cut-past-center shelf with BearHair™ Rest; Dacron® string. Length: 58".
Rated 5 out of 5Â by 5
reviewers.
Rated 5 out of 5Â by PGCanada Good purchase
I've been using the Bear Grizzly 50 lbs for the last 20 years (same original bought) and I'm totally satisfied. It is accurate and consistant.
Got few moose and many deer within this time range and it never failed me.
January 25, 2008
3 Questions | 5 Answers
Outdoor Answers
Get help about this item from fellow customers.
Ask your questions. Share your answers.
Details:Â
I would like to purchase a first bow. I have expierence but I have never owned one. I am deciding between 2 bows the martin x11-50 and this one. I am leaning twoards this one because it looks sturdier but the martin is less expensive. Can you help me?Answers
Details:Â
Im over 6 ft tall and i have a fairly long draw length of 30-31 1/2" and none of these recurve bows list draw lengthAnswers
A:Â
There are no draw length specific recurves. They just gain draw weight the further you pull them backA:Â
Because recurves draw length are not set to a specific length like compound bows. If your draw length is 30 than a recurves draw length will be 30. A draw length on a recurve will effect it's draw weight. The draw weight you purchase for this bow, let's say 50#, is a statement that says; This bow is 50# at 28" draw length. But since your draw length is 30" like mine, that adds extra 4#, making the bow 54# (add or subtract 2lbs for each inch +/- 28")A:Â
There usually isn't a specified draw length. 28" is just the average. But for every inch there usually is a 3lbs addition to your bow, so if you get a 50lb bow, you'll be pulling back 56-60 lbs.1 of 1
1 of 1





 Expand All
 Collapse All
(read all my Q&A)


