I had a bow with remarkably thin sapwood just under 0.1" ! I made it into a 70# @ 32" bow (Dogleg) with a completely untouched back, it eventually broke after about 9 months, but it had a happy life even appearing on TV and having it's pic in a book
The sapwood was almost too thin. I prefer about 3/16 - 1/4"
Here's a pic. It's English Yew from Harlow in Essex (low lying land) it shows how English Yew is soft flabby coarse grained stuff with poorly defined sapwood and no good at all for bows
I cleaned it up as it was such nice wood as a demo/show piece.
I think the rings near the sapwood are exceptionally fine (almost indistinguishable). It was a side branch which had possibly been trimmed at some point slowing its growth, it had been used by kids to attach a swing, the upper edge was chaffed and damaged, but the underside was knot free and perfect. Of course it was compression wood rather than tension wood, but often it's the underside of a branch that's knot free, which shows the difference between theory and practice! Show me a horizontal branch with it's tension side straight clean and knot free if you can!
Del
(There were no kids swinging on it when I cut it, and thre were plenty of other branches for them to tie their swing on
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