So I've been toying around with the idea of building an HLD bow for a bit, so it's kinda on the back burner of my brain. I'm cleaning up in my garage today when I look up and see an ash sapling that I cut in the middle of the winter two years ago. I think, "ah, the perfect piece of wood to experiment on (high crown, decent but not great wood, ect.)."
So I rough out a bow with the bark on. Then I go to remove the bark once it's cut down to size. As I'm doing so, it occurs to me how dog-on stuck that bark is to the wood. I mean, that stuff is on there! More so than when I've applied rawhide with epoxy (don't do that anymore by the way).
Now I'm thinking, I bet if I had left the bark on there'd have been a good possibility it would stay on when the stave became a bow. I realize I'm probably wrong cause if it could be done it probably would have been. But I can't stop wondering...
Has anyone ever considered this? It would be assuming of coarse that the stave was cut in the winter, then left to dry for a long time (at least 2 years). I mean, what would make better camo than the bark!?