Longer bow= easier to shoot well for many reasons. More stable due to length, often easier to draw / "smoother" since longer limbs won't "stack" up as quickly, etc. Careful though, if you go too large it starts being less efficient... With a 26" draw you don't need a very big bow in any case.
Generally accepted guidance from community in past:
A target recommendation would be 64-66" (long limbs, 19-21" riser)
A hunter, for a bit easier handling and nice shooting comfort, might be 60-64" (long limbs, 15-19" riser.) Popular on prairies/grasslands/forests without a ton of undergrowth.
A hunter, stalking in dense brush or in a tight stand/blind might want shorter.. tips hang up on everything.
A couple of good articles below on bow length from different PoV below- hunting and target. Worth reading for a bit.
https://www.bowhunter.com/editorial...nal-bow/182296#:~:text=Bow Length&text=The old rule was if,to be a happy medium.
https://www.lancasterarchery.com/blog/what-size-recurve-bow-is-right-for-me/
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Below is my PoV- take with a big grain of salt: All presuming ILF is your choice.
Almost any riser is a "good riser"- man, wait for the fur to fly on that comment. Grips vary, without trying them it is hard to tell. You won't know what "feels good" unless you go to a coach or pro shop and shoot a bunch of different bows.. and after a year you might have a different opinion anyway. I have shot about 10 different risers myself in 6 years. I like some grips better, but you learn to use them all. I like pretty wood risers.
I would just buy long limbs. Having a ton of limb lengths is confusing. Nothing shorter than "mediums." Spending more than $100 to start out would be wasted- galaxy bronze or silver star limbs are cheap, and good.
Whatever riser you get buy lighter limbs like 16# or 20#, they will be heavier on your short riser anyway. Just plan to invest in new limbs as you get experience. Light limbs can be cheap too.. it will hardly matter starting out.
Arrows are the hard part of the equation. I read in some book "Bow easy, arrows hard." Too true. Many folks recommend aluminum to start with, and there is no argument they are safer to start with! I tune in carbon arrows for my friends starting out with LIGHT limbs since lower arrow mass=more speed= less drop=more fun shooting. I can build out carbon arrows that are very durable and about 30% lighter than aluminum pretty easily. That means about 30% less drop.. 20# bow will shoot to 20yds easily, 30yds even.
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I personally start folks on the simplest, cheapest "decent" recurves I can find.. like a Samick Sage. If money is not a factor, consider just buying a bear takedown. Simple, no LLA screws to worry about, etc.
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And to close: Buy "shooting the stickbow".. Get a coach to help out, get your new bow set up properly with you, some decently matched arrows to start with, etc... worth a few $100 if it saves you a year of trial and error.
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