Probably the first question for everyone. I run a few head of cattle on a place (hard work by my great-grandfather--good luck on my own part), north of my home that includes about 200 acres of dense hardwoods. I have loads of liveoak, post oak (a white variety), and blackjack oak (a variety of red oak). There are scatterings of juniper and hackberry and mesquite and huisatche by the metric ton. No Osage, but the ranch is in the southernmost county in the US showing on most range maps of that tree. A cousin has a few hundred acres along a creek that is alleged to have some 'darks on it. I have him on the lookout for some trees.
Long Term, I would like to build a short plains Indian bow
(Perhaps Comanche ? 😊) with all-authentic materials and stone points dug out of the Texas Hill Country--and use it to kill
a Whitetail. After that, who knows?
But my main goal for a first bow is to make something that works--no doubt with a few shortcuts--perhaps out of a board--make the errors and go on from there. I would like to avoid the need for precisely "chasing a ring" in my first attempt. Comstock praises "white wood"--including oak--and although he doesn't say so, it sounds as if you can make an oak now without worrying about the back ring. In ya'lls opinion, is that true? If not possible in an unbacked now, then maybe use sinew as a cure all?
Thanks,
Russ