+1
IMO This ring count thing is largely nonsense. But a high ring count and dark heartwood looks pretty
I've ocasionally had a 'soft' bit of Yew which as Mike says benefits from heat treatment.
My Yew has varied in ring count and colour but I've found no consistent correllation between either of these factors and performance.
You can get two bits of Yew growing 100yards apart which look entirely different yet behave the same, or look the same but behave different.
'Violations' implies a brutal dissregard for the rings. Sometimes you may need to go across rings, for a variety of reasons (see below) but it should always be done reluctantly, with caution and trying to keep any violations running along or diagonally across the bow if possible. Try to keep an even smooth sapwood layer. The ideal bow has a nothing done to the back other than taking off the bark and cambium layer.
Common reasons for going through rings.
1. Heartwood suddenly swirls or dips (or you just don't have much of it! Following a ring would leave the stave with too much sapwood (I wouldn't want more than 50% sapwood)
The pic shows an extreme example (not recomended) on a 40 year old bow, where I had to step down through about 8 rings else I'd have had no heartwood left! Bottom line, is you can only use the wood that's there.
You'll waste your life if you wait for the prefect stave.
2. The heart/sap boundary doesn't parallel to the rings. You can make the back back follow a ring or follow the heart sap boundary, but you can't do both.
I suggest you ignore the opinions of anyone who starts by saying "I read..." or "I heard..."
If they've actually made some Yew ELBs then listen, but always try to become your own expert.
After all when a bow breaks on you, people who were all too keen to give advice, won't be queueing up to take the blame.
Your suggestion of a 60" ELB is a contradiction in terms. You want at least 70". Trying to make a bow too short for it's drawlength, weight and style is a recipe for disaster. If you only have 60" then go wide and flat, you'll potentially end up with a superb bow.
If 60# hurts your shoulder.. I dread to think what 150# will do to it
Del
(sorry if this sounds like I'm in 'grumpy mode' )
PS Google bowyers Diary if you want to see all my build alongs including the failures. Plenty of ELBs there with twists bumps bends and tricky sapwood... search for 'ridgeback' on the blog, that's an interesting one.