yeah, knew it wasnt that old. the fella who owned the antiquey place knew the guy who made it.
as mentioned previously, i didnt take the time to get his name as i was being frowned at by in-laws to get moving along.....
the handle is sorta odd and i may very well just make it into a shooter
i paid $40 for it if that matters
it is a modern b50 string and puts the bow at proper brace(i have braced it)
and there is not one sign of a tool mark anywheres-super smooth but no finish that i can tell
so i may just back it and do as yall suggested, get that silly handle whittled down
and see how it shoots.
seems silly to have a bow that is not an artifact just hanging around afraid to pull it back n shoot it
if yr in that area ya might stop in that little shack, there were a cupla bows made by the same guy
iirc the fella told me the bow maker comes in and trades his bows for other stuff he wants
if i could recall the name of the palce id call the owner and get the bow makers name
as for calculating age by color-ive seen osage bows 10 yrs old nearly black and others just as old still showing their color
individual wood, how often its been outside and for how long, how its stored etc etc etc all play roles in how osage turns
ive had this particular bow two yrs
heres the map
https://maps.google.com/maps?oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&ie=UTF-8&q=fort+ancient&fb=1&gl=us&hq=fort+ancient&cid=0,0,9578649138181919839&ei=WIbGUKroN4XXqAGCw4HABg&ved=0CK8BEPwSMAEthe antique store is west of the little miami river and just west of that hairpin curve at left side of map on 350
interesting place, lots of old tools and artifacts from the area