adams89: I agree here as well - my argument is not that the native folks didn't like or appreciate their bows, on the contrary, I totally agree with the thought that their bows were cherished and necessary tools. My argument is that I personally believe that an individual warrior/hunter would have his personal favorite bow, and he would have had several other 'worker' bows. On the day that you are going to go fight a big battle or try to impress the chief, you get your favorite fancy perfectly tillered sinew backed flipped tipped recurve of awesomeness and you get to steppin proud. On the day your hitching up your drawers to go shoot a couple of squirrels and a deer or so, and it's been raining and its muddy and damp, and the critters are bedded down in the thick stuff that you are going to have to belly crawl through and get nasty in, you take your worker bow. That's what I do - I have a bow that I LOVE, that wasn't made by me, that is beautiful and shoot hard and clean and fast. I don't take that bow hunting though cause I'm scared of scratching it up. I take my old beater red oak selfbow that is a board with a string and has been rubbed down with boiled linseed oil. I don't give a rat's hindparts if it gets scratched up or dirty, cause it's a hunting weapon and I have no intention of showing it off cause it's ugly. But, it will throw an arrow clean through an Alabama white tail or a rabbit, and one day I'm going to stick a squirrel with it to, if the friggin things would sit still long enough.