I saved a nice looking winged elm log from destruction at work and decided to drag out the wedges and maul and get her split before it started checking on me. It was straight and relatively knot free. No biggie says I. I done a little research first and saw that it was a little ornery about splitting. I used the chainsaw to cut a nice straight kerf in it first and commenced to whailing on the wedges with the maul. Holy Toledo!!! That stuff is tuffer than sweet gum. I beat and beat and then sawed and beat some more. What the heck!! I had a serious case of swamp ass going on and it still wasnt giving in. I flipped the log over and cut another deep kerf in it with the chainsaw. Finally I heard the tell tale sounds and it gradually split (although it still took its good sweet time) as I beat the snot out of my wedges. That stuff is mean. If toughness to split is any indication of quality of bow wood, this stuff should put arrows in orbit. Anyway, I halved the log and sealed the ends up. I decided to wait for it to season some before I quarter it on out (and let my back and blistered hands heal). :'(In the mean time, I think I will stick to more user friendly wood types. Anyone else have trouble with splitting winged elm, and did it make decent bows??