Well, I'm pretty late to this party, and what everyone else has said pretty much covers it, but I can give you a tiny bit of my own experience. As a beginner with maybe a dozen board bows under my belt, including a couple in the corner of shame (when did
that show up?!
), I started out with all hand tools, because that's all I had, and I wanted to make sure I like this well enough to keep doing it (
shaa, right!). As someone with no wood working skills or experience, it made me pay attention to the wood, and what it wanted to do. I've since added a belt sander, which I use a little bit more with each bow, and I'm lusting after a band saw, but till that day comes, my plane works just fine.
I just started working on my first osage stave, and amazingly, when you rasp and file down through the dry, tough sapwood and hit the heartwood beneath, the sound and feel of the tool in your hand changes, from a dead, choked, fuzzy exertion, to a singing skating sensation as the tool glides across the harder wood. And, of course, there's the sight of that beautiful golden grain appearing under your hand with every stroke of the tool.
One way's not better than the other, that's just where my head is these days
.
If you haven't yet actually picked up a tool, there may still be time to run away, but I suspect that it's far to late for that, so welcome to our collective addiction!
Frode