Hi y'all,
I'm currently building my first bow out of a Chestnut Oak stave (I got 11 from one tree) and so far it's been a ton of fun. As you may know, this species is in the white oak group, although the bark is deeply ridged (see the Wikipedia entry on it for a picture of the bark). I've had no problem taking the bark and some cambium off with a draw knife, followed by a home-made scraper to get the rest of the cambium. The trouble is that those furrows in the bark also get down into the wood a bit, so I have some areas of cambium that are lower than the level of the adjacent wood by maybe 1 or 2 mm. In other words, if you visualize the surface of the wood as a landscape, there are "lakes" of cambium in the "valleys" that correspond to the bark furrows. I could get rid of the cambium either by using a curved scraper to get down in those valleys, or I could just use my flat scraper to flatten the "ridges" enough to get those last bits of cambium.
My instinct is to do the latter, since it would give me a nice flat back, but I was wondering if there's any good in doing it the other way. There's plenty of wood in that outer growth ring since I harvested late in the growing season, so I don't think removing a millimeter or two of those ridges would hurt anything. Any advice?