Folks,
I would like to get the opinions of bowyers and experts with more experience or research than myself regarding what I believe to be a myth about the primitive bows of the western United States.
Every resource I have read about the bows made by Native Americans in the west explains that the reason they are short is because they fought and hunted from horseback. However, this explanation does not account for the bows of California, New Mexico, Arizona, the mountainous areas of Colorado, or the desert areas of Nevada or Utah where buffalo hunting from horseback was not common, but very short bows were.
Recently, I have been searching near my home in southern Colorado for materials to build bows and arrows. Let me tell you... it's tough. In fact, it leads me to a hypothesis that I would put forth to explain the preference for shorter bows in the western United States. My hypothesis is this. Bows were shorter because it is nearly impossible to find materials to make arrows for a draw longer than about 23 to 24 inches. Materials, here in Colorado anyway, are limited to chokecherry shoots, wild rose, a few, rare varieties of dogwood (excluding those that came across with European landscape artists), cat tails, or shoots of scrub maple. None of these, in our dry climate have a growing season to produce long, strong, reeds or shoots for long draws, as a general rule. I suspect that even if a resident of the dry southwest had the wealth to trade for a long, straight piece of locust, hickory, or osage, he would regret a longer bow with a long draw because he couldn't find materials to build arrows to go with it.
What do you say? Will some of our experts comment on this hypothesis?
Thanks,
Story Teller
Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA