Hello all, after having made my first bow, and watching it weaken over time until it blew up... I noticed that the wood strains on the handle where I put my sweaty hand to shoot it were slowly raising up. After a few months, the wood all over was no longer nice and smooth, but the grain had lifted due to swelling and humidity. Of course, I did not weather seal the bow, so that only sped up the process.
Now, around here, we have problems with humidity in the house, and it is generally humid. Being that this is winter, and I can't spend time outside, that got me thinking. I know there are some woods that deal very badly with humidity, and you must do everything to protect them. So, is there a wood that does the opposite, and becomes stronger in humidity? So that way you let the bow get wet, and its fine (maybe even good), rather than doing all you can to fight the humidity.
Basically: are there any woods that you can make acceptable bows out of, and that work really well in humidity, or even better, get stronger when they are wet?