Heh guys,
I feel like this question has asked before but when I did a search on Primitive Archer it came up with nothing. I was reading through 'Cherokee Bows and Arrows' by Al Herrin the other day. I only intended to read the section on making the rawhide string at first (sounds a lot simpler the second time reading it than the first time) but then I decided to read what he had to say about finishes because I saved some fat from the bears I shot the past 2 years to make rendered bear fat to rub on bows and I wanted to see how exactly he applies that. In that section he mentions a fellow he knew that had a bow that had been in his family for a hundred years and he shot it sometimes. That got me wondering how long a wooden bow lasts. I've only built ten bows in my 3 years of bowbuilding experience, five of them are still shooting and five have broke and of the five that are still shooting I only own 2 of them, the other 3 are owned by friends who don't shoot that much. I have one bow, my first bow I built, I looked at its tiller the other day and it is not that good but it has shot at least a thousand arrows over the past 3 years and its still holding up, I don't why its survived. That's my experience with wooden bows so I was just wondering how long a good wooden bow generally lasts because a hundred years seems like an awful long time.
Thanks,
Aaron