Hi, I'm just starting bowmaking. Cut four saplings from common local wood. First a couple of alder for practice, then a black locust and vine maple. They are dry and I'm beginning to tiller.
1. I roughed out the wet saplings with a hatchet and then clamping in some recurve and let dry. Couldn't get as much recurve/decurve as I wanted. Limbs were a little thick. Would heat help? would it work on wet wood? Any tricks to divine how much clamping you can do without breaking the limb, or is it just experience? Should I clamp lightly and use heat after tillering is almost done if more curve is needed?
2. With a symmetrical bow - centered handle, centered hand, arrow on top of hand - it seems the arrow will ride a couple of inches high. Is that right?
3. Is vine maple any good for bows? They grow like weeds around here. How does it compare to sugar, big leaf and other maples. The green saplings seem to be pretty low density and crack and splinter easy.
thanks