I've had this narrow hickory board sitting around in the basement for a while and wasn't really sure what I wanted to do with it, but it occurred to me that I wanted a bow that was really long and skinny, and flipping through the Traditional Bowyer's Bible, I rediscovered the weird design that is the English longbow. Curved belly?! Square cross-section?! What is this madness??!!! I had to try it.
The bow actually ended up coming out really nicely. It's about 69" tip-to-tip, pulling 65# at 27". It tapers from 1.5" to 0.5" at the tips - truth be told, the board wasn't thick enough to match the technical specifications of the English longbow (with the width-depth ration of 1 to .66), so it's a sort of flattened version of the design. The tiller is a pretty even D-curve, with a little more bend in the top limb. I haven't taken it out for a test-drive yet, but I'm anticipating about 1.5-2" of set. The bend goes through the handle, which is built up with a couple layers of rawhide on the back and leather on the belly, and wrapped again in corseted black leather. The finish is one coating of Minwax "Gunstock" (which I LOVE), and three coats of tung oil.
And why's it called "Skinny Pete?" I dunno. Why isn't
your bow called that?