Hello Primitive Archers, this is my very first post about my very first osage self bow! I have encountered a couple problems with my staves that appear to be "out of the norm" because i cannot seem to search and answers. Below is my story of my first osage staves and what i did,
after that will be the tl;dr questions that i need answered if you want to just skip to that, thanks!
All was going well, I found an osage tree that was straight as an arrow that was about 10-11" in diameter, i harvested my share (it was a triple tree so it had 2 other sisters coming out of the same stump, so the plant still lives). I was so psyched about this find, but when I get home and split it into staves, i have a single black line going down each slice of the log that i split, it appeared to be dirt!I cannot tell how deep this goes, but I can tell for sure that it is worst on places that have a knotty whole in the wood (there is a picture of that too). Never the less I keep going not wanting to waste the wood and hard work cutting the tree by hand.
I let them sit out in the hot texas summer sun on my back patio for a couple weeks to start drying, I read an article that roughing out a stave to near-bow-dimensions can greatly reduce drying period to as low as a few months rather than a year (
http://paleoplanet69529.yuku.com/topic/15951/Drying-Wood#.U-EADGOM1il), so i select one of the better staves and debark it but couldn't finish chasing a ring or roughing it out to bow size because i have a new job that makes me work 13 hrs, so i don't really have a whole lot of time to finish things lately. since i came back a couple days later after debarking it (i took it inside) there were severe cracks on the sap wood. I then got a draw knife and carved the cracks out to the heart wood. again, the sun was going down before i could finish chasing an entire ring, so i took it inside. the next day, CRACKS again all over the back of the stave. i figured they only originally appeared because it was sap wood, but now there are cracks on the heart wood that i was going to chase to one ring.
BTW, the pic of the giant knotty-hole IS NOT the stave i am working on, that is a different one that will most likely be fire-wood.
TL;DR
1. what do y'all think that black line/dirt is? (seems to be mostly coming from the wholes cause by a knot.)
2. does that black line ruin the whole stave/indicate that the wood is bad?
3.were the cracks caused because i debarked the wood without reducing it to bow-size on the same day?
4. unrelated question... when roughing out the stave to its dimensions, should i just cut it out as if the grain was straight? or does the bow need to follow the grain even if the grain is wavey due to some knots? (like a snakey bow) OR should i just include the knot as part of the bow rather then following the grain AROUND it?
5. whats the best tool (preferably inexpensive) to use to rough out the SIDE dimensions? cuz idk, hacking out 2-3 inches of solid wood on each side of the stave seems unrealistic.
6.recommendations for how i should move forward with the given problems i have?
Thank you so much for answering my question, sorry for the long read but none of these questions seem to be common questions except maybe the last one.
EDIT: sorry i cannot include pictures after all because the pictures are too large, so here is a photobucket link... maybe it'll work?
http://s1375.photobucket.com/user/jaredmeza6253/library/