Hi everyone I'm new to this site and glad to have found it. I'm Dakota, born and raised in SD. Over the last year I've had one of those ah-ha moments and since have had deep passion to learn the old methods of bow making. In this day in age there is no one where I'm from making bows. In reading up on here, watching youtube, and reading some other books, I've been discussing my peoples history on bowmaking with my dad. He told me this story about a connection between king George 3 and my tribe. The king heard of a legend of one of the warriors being able to kill 2 buffalo with 1 arrow. The king dispatched an explorer, I think Longfellow? He was able to have a interpret/guide take him to this village. He met with the warrior and asked for a trade. The warrior didn't want to give up this bow for any amount of gold or jewels as they couldn't provide for his family as the bow could. As a sense of relevancy to this discussion the warrior told the kings men that the maker of the bow was really the one to talk to or get credit for the bows ability to kill even 1 buffalo.
So I think the ancient ones would have religious implications to the bows (as a shot out to the rules I just read being taboo I'd like to add a certain paradox to those rules..) Being the ancient ones relied on those tools to survive there would be a sense of godly power associated to those tools. Not to go all avatar but the natives to this land were and are still very much connected to the lands. p.s. the Kings explorer did come to a trade agreement with the warrior and returned the bow to the king. If anyone else knows of this story or knows where this bow may currently be located please let me know.