Scenario: For unexplained reasons, you find yourself deep in a north american temperate forest, without any hope of contacting the outside world or civilization. Despite the fact there may or may not be better things you could be burning precious calories doing to help the likelyhood of survival, your obsession with primitive archery compels you to do one thing: Craft a usable survival bow. Now, how fast can you make a serviceable bow, and with how many materials? How effective will this bow be at taking game, and how many shots will this bow last? This is always a question in the back of my mind that creeps up now and then. I have thought about it, and I hate watching videos on youtube of people making green bows. As a bowyer, a green bow just seems unnatural to me. I'm sure everyone on here, if walking down the street, came upon a fellow trying to make a bow out of a green piece of wood, it would take the power of 1000 suns to keep yourselves from correcting them and explaining to them their error. So why should it be any difference in a survival situation? I mean for one, if you KNOW there is a good chance you are going to be sleeping in the wilderness already, you are gonna need a shelter and a fire fast. So why not use the fire to dry out a carved out stave while you at it? Or maybe there is a good method for finding dry standing wood, idk. Maybe even just heat treating the belly of a fresh green stave? In a design that would not be too messed up when the stave warped from the shock of so much moisture loss? (Like a circular cross section).
EDIT: I mean, in retrospect, if you don't have a knife, your gonna need to nap something to carve, so you might as well just make a spear and go fishing or something, etc. But still, I'm really wondering if there is any way to season a piece of wood fast enough to make a serviceable bow that will last verses making a green soggy sluggish 3 shot bow.