...And here is why...I made a good shooting bow from.....Eastern Hemlock....
Here is the story:
Shortly after getting back from the Tennessee Classic a large hemlock in my back yard got struck by lightning..The day after it happened I was shooting my bow out there and noticed the bark on a few of the limbs was stripped off clean...My original idea was to harvest some of the bark to use as a decorative backing, similar to birch or cherry bark( which I did)
While harvesting the bark I noticed one pristine limb that was just screaming "Make me into a bow" So I cut it, peeled, and sealed it... I noticed it had really tight rings like 30 -35 rpi. I left the sapwood on and treated it just like any whitewood.I let it season for a couple months and then let it dry out in my car with the windows up for a couple weeks..A week ago I straightened it out as best I could with dry heat and oil( What a joke)...and started tillering...
I finished tillering the bow yesterday and spent today shooting it in...I turned out a hair over 50#@27...66 tip to tip and 1.75 wide tapering to 1/2 tips....It took .5" of set
Things I learned:
-Is hemlock easy to work..Yes
-Is hemlock easy to straighten...Heck no!!!
-The dry wood seemed to tear when working with a rasp....Scraped well
-Hemlock sands well and looks beautiful
-Is hemlock durable as a bow wood( I'll get back to ya on that) Although after several hundred shots, no splinters, change in tiller, or fretts
-Will hemlock make a fast bow...Heck yeah..the wood is physically light
-Will hemlock make as good of bow as Osage,HHb,or yew....probably not (although this bow is pretty sweet)
- Was it fun...Oooohhhh yyyeeeaaahhh...I love experimenting
I'll get some pics up as soon as I get her prettied up( or she blows on me....)