How I started; I shot a recurve until compounds came out (I am an old guy) then went to the dark side for 18 years. In 89 I had a fully decked out overdraw compound limb split as I was drawing on the biggest buck of my life, I had called him in to 7 yards. I got the bow fixed under warranty, immediately sold it, bought a $25 vintage recurve and went back to my roots, I never shot another compound.
We had an indoor archery range in town that the club I ran kept up, soon a bunch of us oddballs were meeting there twice a week to shoot trad bows. I bought a Howatt Hunter to replace my vintage Bear then ordered Bighorn in about 1990 or 91. I became deadly with my recurve.
Sometime in the early 90s I was walking down a road at my hunting club and ran into a guy I didn't know carrying what looked like a tree limb with a string on it and a bunch of arrows, I had my fancy Bighorn recurve. I asked him" you hunt with THAT", he replied "sure". Next I asked "ever kill anything with it ", he replied "I killed a deer with it last week". Now, this peaked my interest.
We introduce ourselves, his name was Joe Bogle, he didn't know me from Adam but invited me to his house to show me how he made bows. The spark was ignited!
A few days later I was on his deck overlooking the lake while he gave me the basics of wood selection, staves, shaping and tillering. I had to give this bow making stuff a try. I had been a serious duck decoy carver so I had all the tools at my disposal.
I bought the available videos and bow building books at the time, the pickings were slim.
I later found I lived in osage country but didn't know how to recognise a tree. I went to a local sawmill, bought a rough, half rotten osage board that had been on the rack for about 20 years and went home to make a bow.
My neighbor was a deer killing machine so I collected his deer legs and stripped the sinew out of them for my future bow. I cut what I thought looked like a bow out of my osage board, sinew backed it because of the grain violations, made it bend somewhat, pulled it to full draw the first time I pulled it back and started shooting. This poorly tillered bow blew up after thirty shots or so in spite of the sinew backing.
I learned what osage looked like, found some on some private land close to my house and got permission to cut a few staves.
As most of us converts are, I still had that recurve mentality so I made a working recurve with a recurve like handle next. It wasn't great but it stayed together, I actually won a few tournaments with it. I think it is still alive today, it ended up with a nephew.
Now I had the disease and started cranking bows out as fast as I could, I went on a tear cutting osage as well.
In 96 I wanted to completely commit to selfbows but was easily drawn back to my Bighorn, it had to go. I sold the Bighorn and 2 extra sets of limbs and became a selfbow guy. I kinda' wish I had kept it now, but it is long gone.
20 years and a zillion bows later I have slowed down a good bit but am still making them. I am tillering a new BBO in the shop today.