The majority of yew in Europe is knotty, kanrly and twisted. The stuff doesn't grow straight, especially as compared to other woods, such as ash. The good stuff also takes an age (hundreds of years) to grow, so it could hardly be tended to or farmed for the sole purposes of bow staves.
Yet England was making thousands of thousands of yew bows, and also importing thousands of thousands of bow staves. England even taxed merchants and required them to 'pay in yew staves'.
How was this even possible considering how rare good yew is to come across? Maybe they chopped all the good stuff down, but it's been hundreds of years since the warbow was decommissioned, so plenty of trees would have replaced the ones cut.
I keep hearing Alpine yew was also considered the best, but most of that is short, twisted and stubby, just like Juniper in the desert. The MR bows looked super clean and with only few knots, almost like pacific yew.
Thoughts?