Has anyone tried a hickory backed hophornbeam? I know hophornbeam can stand alone as a self bow. A friend cut the tree for me. Not being a bowyer the stave are less than perfect. This same friend plans to get "seriously" into bow hunting for deer next season. He sees his options as spending 2K for a new complete compound setup, OR maybe going the traditional route with instinctive shooting style that he thinks ( and I agree) would be better suited to his personality. I'm making him a bow so he can shoot it this summer to decided which direction he wants to go. I want to make this transition as easy as possible for him. So, I'm planning to make a center shot bow with arrow rest and sight window.
I can probably splice a couple of the ironwood staves to make a pretty straight bow. Since it already going to be a spiced center shot bow with an arrow shelf, I thought I might add hickory backing for insurance and possibly add performance.
This is a pretty important project for me. Brian is a friend of over 30 years. We hunt and fish together often. He's also a gifted wood worker. He's carved beautiful 2 ft. tall rocking horses from a single block of ERC and several trout. He owns over 250 acre, 150 are wooded. He has his own sawmill. I'm not saying this because I'm looking to exploid what he has, because he'll pretty much let me cut any tree I wanted and is happy to fire up the sawmill if I need it. I just want to SNARE a close friend into the ways of traditional/primitive archery. I know if he's successful learning to shoot a traditional bow, he'll be building his own within a year and probably knapping his own points, too.