mpeg7 hours ago
The culture of my home island of Mallorca has a pretty deep link to slings, the ancient Greeks and Carthaginians both named us after our slingers, and later on we became a key Roman foothold in the punic wars partly because of the slingers, who became part of an elite unit of shock troops in the Roman Empire
It was our weapon of choice for defence, protecting us from pirates and would-be conquerors as well as farming, as shepherds used both slings and dogs to herd and protect their animals.
I find it pretty fascinating, I'm also a terrible shot with a sling, you have to try it to really understand how hard it is to aim when swinging a rock at something.
jmkd2 hours ago
Glad to see this here, Balearic slinging has a rich and impactful history. But sadly this is not much appreciated today on the islands.
The Federation hosts open days where only a handful of people show up. Top slingers from the islands are treated with great acclaim when they travel to international competitions but at home few know who they are. The Balearic Government and local councils show little interest in supporting or promoting this activity.
I can't help feel it could and should be much more popular, with an injection of support and enthusiasm, especially as the islands try to rediscover a post-tourism identity.
But I don't see any evidence of this yet. I continue to do my little part in telling everyone I know how fascinating this sport is.
And yes, how incredibly difficult! I had probably 50 attempts before I hit a large target just 7 or 8 metres away.
mpegan hour ago
I'll try to make one of the events if I'm in the islands, I saw they do a yearly competition in Ibiza around October, my parents live there now so it's convenient.
As with anything non-tourism related, it's can be a bit hard to find these events when the only advertising might in the town hall website (if that!) and sometimes instagram
ainiriand5 hours ago
Hey paisano! Not sure about you but me as a kid in Palma we had 3months of sling lessons during PE class!
mpegan hour ago
Uep, com va? That's pretty cool, I grew up in Palma too but we didn't have that, I suppose it greatly depends on the school
bee_rider6 hours ago
It is even harder to see sling bullets than arrows, right? I imagine fighting slingers would be even more scary than the normal ancient battlefield. Sort of like a proto-gun, in the sense that you have people dying with no warning.
doodlebugging4 hours ago
Thanks for this post. Sometimes you need a relatively simple tool for controlling a problem. I think this is something that I need to employ here on my place.
I have a problem with deer. My property is effectively an interstate highway for them with lots of delicious grazing available in my native grass pasture and in my orchards and gardens. I have fenced the important areas where we grow our food using deer fencing and it is effective. It does not stop the traffic though, it merely redirects it. I want the deer to avoid my property and using the scented repellent products is ineffective.
I bought a slingshot with a bunch of mudball ammunition and started using that every time I found them over the fence on my property. It is effective enough that you can make them leave if you tag one of them. After a while, they recognize the sound of the slingshot release and will trot off a little ways to buy time to determine whether there is an issue. Aiming and hitting targets is not hard and your skills improve over time so that it is pretty easy to score on 80% of targets in no time. The real problem is the effective range of the slingshot. For deer more than 50m from you the ball has lost most of the energy and when it thumps on the deer the usual result is that the deer raises its head from the grazing and looks around to locate the source.
I think a sling will be the next tool that I employ to make them graze someone else's property. The improved range should help me keep them on the other side of the fence.
staplung3 hours ago
The sling seems like it has a steeper learning curve and colorful failure modes, like breaking a sliding glass door or somesuch. You might have better luck with a fairly low draw-weight bow and some blunt rubber-tipped arrows.
My guess is that deer wouldn't be frightened by a drone but the sound is pretty annoying. Maybe it would be a good Pavlovian conditioning trigger to pair with some other deterrent.
Could you put sprinklers out there?
doodlebugging2 hours ago
I'm lucky enough to be in a semi-rural area with only one neighbor within 200m. The deer come from a large area that is currently under development for an encroaching subdivision. That subdivision is about about 350m at the closest point today though it will eventually extend to my back fence. That sucks but the newest construction has taken more than 20 years to reach that point.
I have a bow and have considered that option but I think the lethality could be a problem or the possibility of injuring a fawn. I just want to keep them on the other side of the fence. I would employ a drone to chase them since that would be fun but my place is in a no-fly radius near a small airport so that isn't an option without assuming some risk.
There is too much ground to cover for sprinklers to be effective even though the paths are well-established. I have tried path modification but that just shifts the crossings back and forth along the fence line. I have nice native grasses and plants and some really tasty fruit trees so my place is attractive.
The slingshot does the trick for the times when they are less than 35m away. Farther than that it gets dicey and they will just stand still until one is hit before they amble off into the trees.
This sling has better range though there is a learning curve. That will be the fun part.
jsattlerop5 days ago
Recently came across this website after watching this https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EpxSaOiT2LE. Seems like a cool hobby to try for when I'm finally replaced by AI. I knew about the sling from movies but I didn't know this is actually a thing to do. Very impressed how far you can sling something with it (477m/1564feet). Sharing this in case someone is on the hunt for a new cool hobby.
foreigner8 hours ago
That was a lovely video, thank you.
jsattlerop8 hours ago
You're welcome, I also enjoyed the video very much.
quantum_mcts2 hours ago
Around 2018 I got obsessed with slings - I've made a couple from paracord and was practicing almost every day. After about a year I only managed to consistently launch stones in the rough desired direction. Another (COVID) year and got to the level where my spread was about 5 degrees. Systematically hitting a reasonably sized target was still beyond my ability. Plus early symptoms of tennis elbow...
Slinging is hard, requires a lot of dedication and systematic practice. Stil, the feeling when the rock hits a target and "explodes" is worth it.
ridgeguy2 hours ago
Perhaps to some degree, kids recapitulate in their childhoods the weapons evolution of their homo sapiens forebears.
Around age 4, I learned how to flake spear points from a local flint deposit. That, string and Elmer's glue from mom & dad's repair goodies got me into the spear biz. Band-Aids were in demand.
A couple years later, I'd made arrows and single curve bows from pine branches and bowstring from braided water rushes. Flint knapping scaled down well to arrowheads and string+glue still worked.
Then I read about atlatls, and found new interest in my spears. Finally, I discovered slings, and there was no going back. I got good enough that in later life, I had no trouble crediting scientific studies that proposed early humans brought down a great range of game species with slings.
Alaska was a great place to be a kid.
andrewlan hour ago
Speaking of ranged weapons, I used to throw boomerangs. Not the heavier, non-returning kind made for hunting, but the lighter returning boomerangs. It felt like magic when I finally got good enough to throw one and not have to take a step to catch it. I should get back to it. I think they’re fascinating. And I just read in Wikipedia that tests on the International Space Station found they function the same way in zero gravity as they do on Earth.
tlb6 hours ago
A naive estimate of accuracy is that, at a rotation speed of 5/sec (1800 degrees/sec) a 1 ms error in release time causes a 1.8 degrees aim error, or 3 yards at 100 yards. You could hit the broad side of a barn, but not a buffalo.
But humans can’t reliably time things to 1 ms, and good slingers aim better than that, so there’s more to the technique than the naive version.
codemonkey-zeta6 hours ago
You assume the stone is released along a circular path, but that isn't quite right. When you release the stone you extend your arm forward, changing the arc of travel.
datsci_est_20155 hours ago
Ah the power of elliptical motion!
kqr2 hours ago
I would assume sling release is not done by timing but by proprioception.
bob10297 hours ago
I like how far we took this idea.
black_puppydog6 hours ago
wow that last bit with the broken rope was insane. like that scene from Garden State, but in grown-up. :D
edit:
that scene: https://youtu.be/XotiySdBICU?t=107
someone7x7 hours ago
I learned by making a paracord sling and flinging marshmallows.
I like to believe it’s so fun because I’m tapping into some primordial fascination with spinning objects, like a dog chasing a wheel.
lukeinator425 hours ago
I have a couple slings my cousin brought back from Tibet, and a few years ago when I was in Peru I brought some back from there as well (they're called 'huaraca' in Quechua I think). I find it interesting that many cultures used them historically but it never became a sport like archery, javelin, etc., did.
They're very lightweight and are definitely an underrated backpacking tool for keeping marmots at bay when they're attacking your tents and gear, haha.
Retric4 hours ago
I think it’s the same reason there’s no sport of throwing stones at targets but there is a sport of throwing darts at a board. Scoring is harder when the projectile bounces.
Horseshoes, curling, shuffleboard, etc use where the projectile ends up but that’s not a viable option with a slingshot.
yorwba4 hours ago
The World Slinging Association may beg to differ on the "never became a sport" part: https://www.facebook.com/WorldSlingingAssociation/
bee_rider6 hours ago
I made a couple slings when I was a kid… I put a lot of effort into researching the right form of the thing, carefully braided it… and then couldn’t figure out how to use the thing even one bit. Couldn’t even figure out when to release the cord. I had poor hand eye coordination in the first place, but I could throw the rocks farther and more accurately by hand.
Still think they are very cool though.
exabrial5 hours ago
There's a youtuber that makes some really cool performance slings out of modern materials (dyneema and what not). Too lazy to search right now, but if this interests you, its worth checking out.
MichaelRo4 hours ago
Yeah well, the first time I tried to use a sling to trow a rock, I managed to knock said rock right on my head. Fortunately it wasn't too bad but it also market the last time I tried to use a sling.
And also explains why the bow was much more popular. Gotta try much harder to shoot yourself.
Simulacra10 hours ago
Oof FYI site is being hugged to death.