Well, I continue to learn! I am waiting to win one here!
The bark came off easily with two hands and a skinner blade. The pole looked good. I squared the end and cut a center cut to start the wedge. It splits easier than anything I think. I split a 155 inch stave with an ax head and a 2 pound ball peen hammer in a couple of minutes. I would have been better off cutting it in half! The split walked about 40 degrees around the stave and then split out the side near the small end. I went to the other end and started to split the rest off. When the sapwood was knocked off, it revealed a darker wood core that was full of what looked like some kind of mold. Cut two feet off that end and split the rest of the thing down close. Long story short. A very good boyer might be able to do something with it, but it is entirely too challenging for a beginner!
It is twisted, crooked, and ants had been in the pith at one point. I cut a 16 foot 5 inch pole with a machete and carried it to the house. Split it and did my best to recover something useful. There is an 80 inch stave out there if you want to call it that. It is crooked, rippled, has two half inch knots where a fade would be, and when the insect damage was cut out, the one end is going to determine the orientation of the rest of the stave. I am thoroughly disgusted , but I learned again!
Is it in the TBB that it says that Sassafras is a very good bow wood?
They compared it to black locust if I remember correctly! Well, they have to be talking about a very large sassafras with healthy heartwood or something!
I may go back and cut a ten incher and split it in quarters to see if it is the same. If it is, maybe someday in the future when I am bored with this Boyer stuff, maybe I will need a challenge and I will remember this stave!
As loud as I am crying, it was a cheap afternoon doing something I enjoyed! I have some pretty serious muscle cramps in my ribs after using the spoke shave as long and as hard as I just did, but most of the things I like to do make me sore these days!
I read a build along where people were making sapling bows a day or so ago. This stave is more challenging than those. Maybe if it was a blond version of Osage it would be worth it! If it isn't good bow wood then there is no way to justify the kind of work this one would take unless you were just needed a challenge for your skills!
Humm, the highway guys topped a 12 inch white oak across the road that is growing under the lines. I may go get the part with the the eight or so foot straight section here in a minute and see what is inside it!
Is white oak a good bow wood for building from a split stave?
I think I am sinking into a depression!