haha get it? A bow with knots and its full draw is just foolish.By nature I am not a perfectionist. This being said, I realize that when making bows perfectionism is very important, especially when tillering. So, I'm working on building that mindset of, "It HAS to be perfect!"
Not everything is finish finished but it's finished enough to shoot and have fun with. Plus I like the rugged look
When I split my hackberry stave I split it off a really nasty part from the rest of it, expecting to throw it in the burn pile and focus on the rest of the stave. However, I saw a bow in it and I decided I would practice with it before I made a quality bow from the rest of the stave. My reflection on this bow will be after the pictures.
Braced.
Here's the "fool" draw I was talking about. It's tillered out to over 30" and to get a powerful shot you got to pull back that far.
I noticed after taking these pictures that it might help if I take some wood off of the upper and inner part of the top limb. I'm happy with the bottom limb.
I heard it was cool to temper the belly of the bow... so one night while sitting around the fire with a buddy I roasted it, some areas more than others. lol.
I kept the handle simple since that wood feels so nice.
Before this one I made a mini bow to practice tillering. I love this mini bow. It's made from crepe myrtle and is so snappy. It's got some attitude for sure.
It's tillered out to about 18". After I've had my fun with it I'll probably make some blunt arrows and a quiver for it and give it to some kid to terrorize the neighborhood.
It took some set but I'm ok with that since it indicates which side is back and which side is belly. A kid might not get that right off the bat.
Back of the handle. I left the bark on
For the mini bow I made this slick little fishing arrow.... ya, I already broke it. lol
The string on hack bow is the same string I had on my last bow. I'm very proud of that string because I made it from agave.
Aight, I got some questions for all the bros... I mean pros out there.
1. Do I need to take the bark off?
-It's slowly chipping off in places where it's being bent. Otherwise I cannot simply peel it off with my hands. Tempering it seemed to make it brittle and chip off easier
2. When heat treating how important is it to get the entire limb evenly?
3. Is it possible to do a flemish twist or infinite loop with fibers that are only like a foot and a half?
-If it is I'll just look it up online and figure it out from there. I attempted the flemish twist but it didn't work well. More practice I guess.
4. The arrows in the full draw pictures are brazilian pepper. I kind of like it for arrows. Has anyone else tried it before?
And as always, I love it when you guys destroy me with constructive criticism. Bring it on!
In all seriousness, I would appreciate constructive criticism. Sarcastic harshness is fine though... like if you had a bad day at work and you just want to say it like it is then go for it.