It shouldn't take very long, as long as you have your heel stretch! to practice it, lay on the floor in your left split, bend toward your left foot, and hold that foot with your right hand. also, slightly turn your body toward the front. Good luck with everything!!
CHEERS
a long time
10 to twenty weeks.
you make a bow seprate and the arrow you find when killing a skeleton
The arrow should be as long as your your hand holding your bow to your cheek thats how long it should be
the arrow you should choose depends on the draw lenght of the archer. when you go to an archery shop, take your bow and they will give you an arrow with a ruler on it, you draw the arrow in the bow and the shop owner will tell you how long you draw the arrow.
That would vary wildly upon the bow and the arrow. There are many different types of bow and probably a fair few different types of arrow.
Long Bow
There are several sites on how to make a bow's, I will include a couple of sites and an excerpt from one of them: (#4 is a video for a toy bow & arrow)A high quality bow can take weeks or months to cure and construct, but a simpler version (1.0) can be made relatively quickly and with readily available materials. The instructions below, based largely on the U.S. Army Survival Manual FM 21-76, can teach you how to construct a "field-expedient" bow.# http://www.wikihow.com/Make-a-Bow-and-Arrow # http://www.bio.brandeis.edu/fieldbio/Survival/Pages/bowandarrow.html# http://www.ihowd.com/how-to-make-a-bow-and-arrow # http://www.metacafe.com/watch/521403/how_to_make_a_bow_and_arrow_set/# http://www.wikihow.com/Make-a-Flat-Bow-and-Arrow
Which meaning of the word bow? There's the bow of a boat, a ribbon and bow, a bow and arrow, take a bow...
nothing
the bow and arrow
No, Athena is not typically depicted with bow and arrow. Bow and arrow are most often depicted with Artemis.
it depends on context: bow, noun, (as in bow and arrow) = keshet (קשת) bow, noun, (as in "take a bow") = keedah (קידה) to bow, verb (as in, to make bow-shaped) kishet (קישת) to bow, verb (as in bending forward in front of an audience) = kahd (קד)