Hey fellas,
Thought I do this post so you can have an idea where some of my "off-beat" ideas come from, other than bein just plain nuts
If and when I come across something that sounds interesting or unusual I make a note of it and start to dig into the matter and man ya cant believe the things you find out. I'd like to share one trip about NA bows with you. A little long winded but maybe you will find it interesting.
Im going to put quotes in from my readings ( attribution at the end) and then explain how I got to the far out end of it.
"In every Indian wigwam were kept bow-staves on hand in different stages of readiness for work" and "These treasures were put into careful training at once, bent,straightened, steamed,scraped, shaped whenever a leisure moment arrived." (1)
"The curvature of the bow was determined almost entirely by individual strength or caprice" (2)
"The warrior and the hunter tended their bow with as much care as though they were children. Every time they were used they were careful to oil them to preserve their elasticity." (3)
The seasoning process is slow and very thorough. A little cutting, shaping and scraping with knife or piece of glass, then a hard rubbing with buffalo fat or brains, and the stick is put aside in a warm place, to be worked at again in a few days or weeks." (4)
"The making of a good bow was a task involving long and painstaking labor.It was wrought into shape only a little at a time, being repeatedly oiled meanwhile, and constantly being handled and worked to keep the wood pliable." AND " The bow, if not in actual service, was kept close in a case, and the arrows in a quiver. Great pains were taken that they should not by any chance become wet, and much time was spent handling them, that the bow should not lose it's spring and the arrows should not warp." (5)
1.) Mason, quoting several writings of Consult Henry Balfour, John Murdoch, D.N. Anuchin etc.
2.) Captain, J.G. Bourke, letter
3.) Timerlake, quoted by Jones, So. Indians, p. 252
4.) Dodge, Plains of the Great West, Putnam, ppp. 348,349
5.) J.B. Dunbar: Pawnee Indians, sec. 20
In the course of looking into the documents listed and references, I noticed that there was a lot of information in military dispatches regarding various expeditions. While looking into that I ran across the name of P.H. Ray and remembered that from quotes in several Smithsonian reports. Very interesting man (from Georgia) Civil war, Indian expeditions to the Yellowstone, headed the military escort for the studies of the Eskimo in the Arctic sponsored by the Smithsonian, raised volunteers for the Spanish American war etc. etc.
He was considered an expert observer by the scientific community. I saved the actual report of the 1873 Yellowstone Expedition because it has references to actions by Custer and it's easy to see why he screwed up and got his command killed later on and some of the problems they had regarding ordnance.
One of Rays' reports to the Military Hqts, and the Smithsonian, mentioned these wood manipulations to "bows in training" Thats why I got really fascinated with things like the grease/pitch/ oil finish, the counter-flexing (working), and the "training of the wood from green to bow. So my next thing I,m trying is this:
The Ironwood in the pictures was cut as dead standing, but after splitting and rough shaping I noticed that the wood was not yet dry or cured because while checking the floor tiller bend (how much it would bend w/o excess force) This was evidenced by the fact that the wood wanted to stay in the bent position with slight pressure. That in turn made me to try out the whole "bow in training" concept. I figured that instead of just putting up the straight stick to dry I cold bent the stick into a general reflex. This I did by placing the stick into my little bending gizzmo and bent it to the shape you see in the pictures and then put it up to cure. I checked for the first 2 days and it did not change it shape at all, and now 9 days later it is still in the shape I bent and drying nicely and will keep it's shape after bending 4-6" in the normal direction so it's gettin real close to being a bow. I will post the bow after I'm sure the stick is dried sufficiently. In the meantime here's some photos of the start of this experiment........research is a circular path at least for me, but I'm dizzy anyway
rich