This website seems to have a very solid list of tips and how-to's for drying bamboo. Looks like a well informed site. Also read
this page.I've got a few tips of my own I want to share with you:
- Dry the poles in the whole, and cut them to slats only after they've dried. I've heard of green bamboo slats 'curling up' as they dried, because the inside dried and shrinks faster than the outside.
- Cut poles as old and straight as possible. 4-5 inches diameter is perfect. One pole will easily yield enough material for six bows, so select the pole wisely as to not create too much loss. Old poles are a lot stronger than younger poles. It's hard to judge the age of a pole, but the harder and darker green, the older it is. Any brown leaves or
bracts also indicate the pole is old.
- Do not over-dry the poles. When bamboo experiences rapid moisture loss, it will crack lengthwise. This can happen in one day, for instance when the temperature suddenly rises with a drop in humidity. Do that last bit of drying, to force out the last bit of moisture,
after you've split/cut slats from the pole.
- Bamboo is an excellent backing for compression strong woods. Ash is not one of them; do not apply a bamboo backing to an ash board.
- Although is technically isn't, bamboo can be considered a wood. That means that any glue proven in wood-to-wood glueing applications in bows can be used. Titebond, Urac, resorcinol, G2 or other epoxies...