You take a compound bow shooter, with mediocre recurve shooting ability, with a huge urge to make his own longbow. Only problem is, I have no woodworking skills or experience. This IS my first bow. I have seen my mom's fiance make his first bow, but it didn't turn out, and it was a board bow. So, here we go.
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So, I take a walk up the hill, to try and a suitable tree or limb. I figure it needs to be a small tree, because I am not using power tools, and it is much easier to bring down. So, I see a skinny little tree, about 9 feet tall, that I figure looks suitable for a bow. Keep in mind I have no skill at all, so I don't know what type of wood it is. I could tell it wasn't hickory, that's about it.
So, I take my handsaw, that my girlfriend so graciously bought me for valentines day, and cut it down, and roughly to length.
Then I carried it back home, and started on the rest. I used a hammer and an old hatchet to split the wood in half. It sounds like an easy job, but you have to make sure that you are splitting it even and straight, and it takes a while, or at least it did for me. I occasionally used a crowbar to help split in places that the hammer couldn't reach the hatchet.
After the tedious task of splitting the wood, I am left with two crooked staves. I picked the wider and straigher of the two to continue on with. So, with a draw knife, I slowly peeled of the bark.
Once the bark was off, I have a crooked raggy-tag crappy looking stave.
I next put it behind my old woodstove in an attempt to rapidly season it. I will start with the tapering in a few weeks. Here is my stave.
I will continue when seasoning is done.