I picked through a hickory stack at the lumber yard the other day and found a nice straight grained board.
When I was checking out the guy doing the measuring said "and this looks like a piece of birch.."
I said, "really? I got it from the hickory stack.." then he said "oh well it has some streaks in it..no it's hickory, yeah it's hickory. It's just that sometimes things don't get put back in the right place..."
Anyway I got it home along with a piece of ash and a piece of black walnut. I cut the ash to size and into board staves with the table saw then got ready to cut the "hickory". I thought well this will be a lot harder on the saw (usually it is). It just didn't seem as hard to cut as it has in the past. I cut 4 board staves at 64" and grabbed one to lay out a bow. Got it laid out and ready to cut with the band saw. Again it seems like the saw is really working well, the blade was magically replaced with a new sharper one, or the "hickory" I have is not as dense as others I've worked with.....and again when I did a little sanding it just seemed way to easy to sand out some tool marks...
I'm starting to think the guy was right...with his first thought.
So IF this is really birch what would you suggest I do differently? Or what should I prepare for? I have already cut the wood to 2 inches or a little wider and 64" long. My intent is to make a 64" recurve. I imagine I need to back it. (I was planning to back it any way) I'm thinking of using silk. Any suggestions?