This is a great thread so here's my humble addition.
I had shot a lot of archery as a young 'un, lemonwood bows and solid fiberglass bows, arrows made. Eventually a Damon Howatt Hi-Speed recurve
I was shooting black powder quite a bit in the 80s and saw a couple of osage pony bows and then a few more. Hmm, I wonder if I could do that, I think I should try. I was at defunct The Mountain Man store in Manitou Springs, CO in the early 90s, 93 I believe and saw Primitive Archer, what a great magazine. Bought the two different issues they had. Later I picked up Hamm'. s Bows and Arrows and Quivers and made a couple of bows. Scraped, whittled, chopped a couple of primitive bows, broke 'em. Found a copy of the Bent Stick. Let's approach it with a bit more forethought I says. So I measure, take my time and it worked.
Built a nicer shootable hickory flatbow in 1995 or so. Certainly overbuilt, slow, but it's still shooting. Tried some osage, fence post quality, made another overbuilt, slow, flatbow. Took some set but it too is still shooting. Both reside on my rack now mostly. A year or two later made an ELB style osage bow. It was an easy bow to make, fell into nice tiller at once, didn't take any set, and I took that one to the first MoJAM. All were mid 40s or so.
I'm not a prolific bowyer, maybe one or two a year average, sometimes more, sometimes less. I'm sure not in the class of most bowyers I meet at MoJAM. I'm firmly in the camp of 'It flings an arrow and hasn't broke yet" Most I've gifted to others or traded occasionally. I actually shoot bows made by others at MoJAM more than my own. I admit it, they are a lot better.
The internet really opened my eyes to what could be done, even in the halcyon days of Web-TV and dial up. Several internet sites saw my regular patronage.
MoJAM keeps me going, year after year.