here's the staves from three logs i split this morning. The wood was old, down god or ravenbeak knows how long. In places, the sapwood was rotten and spalted and split. But the heartwood is good, and on a couple staves the sapwood is good through as well. Four of these staves have wicked twist, about 60 degrees. And huge knots. Look em over and tell me what you think. Can i started tillering these right away?
Here are the 4 staves from the largest, twisted log. You can see the twist pretty clearly.
There are a couple VERY gnarly staves here. But a couple that won't be too hard...i just need to steam the suckers straight...
The next two logs were straighter, and smaller, and so only yielded 4 staves in total. They are pretty good, i think most of the big knots will be outside the bows.
And i want to say: splitting does seem superior to bandsawing, as the wood naturally splits on the grain and preserves wood around big knots. On the other hand, you could just let the bandsaw wander with the grain ...
Look how bad the rot is in this one...sapwood's coming right off.
But look how nice this one is:
This one will be fun to make, too...but will i have to steam that bend out? Or can i save it so that my arrow is naturally more center-shot?
All in all, not a bad take for a guy with no truck, living in an apartment. I have 5 more logs 80" long or so waiting for me in the bush, and my boss says he'll pick em up for me next week and bring em to my place. I should head out there and split em ahead of time so i don't have to do it here.