this bow was designed more to be reminiscent of an elb than to be a true elb. it was plan B for a bow I was making for a coworkers kid. the first stave had some bad tearouts from splitting that doomed it to fall underweight for an elb, so it became the short static recurve I posted recently. Both of these came from a standing dead osage tree a student cut down for me several months ago. Love getting preseasoned wood
As expected, it was a little gnarly and had plenty of bugs and rot on the outer layers, which happened to be paper thin in the outer 1/3 of the 4" diameter log (another reason the first came under weight). This came from 1/2 of that log, handle has some of the center rings in it.
I started big and worked down slowly, looking at Shaun's osage elb build a bunch and bugging Del a few times
. At first rough out, it was proly a 120# bow!
So i redrew my lines, determined not to be underweight, and carefully worked the sides and belly down to elb-ish dimensions. Strung it at low brace, threw it on the tree, and i'll be if it didn't need but a tiny touch up of tillering!
Yeehaw, love when that happens!!! Forgot to mention, i did wrastle quite a bit of twist and wiggles out of it to get it as straight as it is before the reduction. Nuff talk, here she is:
Name: "Dead Standing" (how the old English archer left his opponent, and of course the tree she came from)
67" ntn
1" wide handle tapers to 3/8" tips (approximate)
7/8" thick to a hair under 3/8" thick at tips (handle is somewhat stiff, left more wood there for grip)
Deer antler nocks
27#@28" (the kid has about 24" draw, so he has growing room. She can go out to about 32" where she should hit high 30's)
I made a half dozen arrows to go with her with red and black feathers to complement. Sorry, no pics of those (cept one in the money pic!).
Still hadn't applied the floppy rest at pic time, so the grip still has some extra string, just ignore it
Thanks Del for your input! Y'all enjoy, critiques are welcome
Forgot the antler nock detail!!...