Hi All,
This is a great site and am hoping to get a lot of questions answered in the following weeks. I am not entirely new to making bows, but I have never made an "advanced" bow capable of taking big game. I am an experienced big game hunter, but only for rifle hunting and I've always wanted to get into bowhunting but would never take an animal with a compound bow. I made a promise to myself that the first big game animal that I take with a bow will be with a bow that I constructed myself, along with an home made arrow and home made trade point.
I'm from North Idaho and some parts of this area have an abundance of yew. Two summers ago after spending a lot of time looking for suitable yew staves I came across a decent stave, cut it and cured it, and this winter break I plan on constructing a bow with it.
The stave is about 7 feet long, is remarkably straight, has very few knots and is about 3 1/2" at the bottom and 2 3/4" at the top. If anyone is familiar with finding suitable yew in my state, they will probably know that this is a rarity (at least in my opinion).
I'm still not entirely sure how wide or long I will make this bow -- I'll decide when I actually start working on it. I was going to back the bow with sinew I collected from animals I killed this year, but all of the sinew mysteriously disappeared, so I will have to find an alternate backing material to use.
I know nothing about making an effective yew bow other than it's extremely hard to work on. I had some shorter, less viable staves that I tried working on, but with my limited number of tools (a draw knife, cheap hand plane and no vice), it proved too hard to do. I'm a college student so my budget is very limited, but I will be able to work on this new bow at my parent's house which has a large selection of wood working tools.
I have some questions that need to be answered before I start working on this bow, and any answers would be greatly appreciated.
1.) Should I make nock inlays to protect the yew from the string? If so, could I use a harder wood like maple?
2.) Should I recurve the bow or keep it straight?
3.) Should I plane the wood down flat on the belly and make a riser for the handle, or should I incorporate the handle in one piece?
4.) What would you recommend for length since my stave is about 7 feet long right now?
Thank you very much for any input.
Tom