I've had a recurring problem of limbs cracking at the sinew line. I never had this happen when living in OH or even the desert in AZ.
So far this has happened to limbs of a yew flatbow, 2 sets of bamboo (asiatic style), two osage flatbows, and a couple of others I can't remember as they completely came apart and went in the fire place in a moment of rage ; all of which were began here in the mountains of N. New Mexico. Also, it seems to manifest as I get the limbs down closerto draw weight and start exercising the limbs, though I have had one or two just sitting doing nothing in the living room and I hear an audible snap.
I have a yew and two osage flatbows that were sinewed in OH and AZ, and they do not have this issue. Might be that being sealed well they slowly climatized, they did gain an average of 8 pounds each.
So what I'm wondering is if there might be a relationship between high altitude and low humidity causing the sinew to dry too quickly? A non-boyer local said the altitude and low humidity acts like a freeze dryer here. I'm inclined to believe that. This morning the local airport showed 9% humidity, and we are just shy of 8000 feet elevation...and it rained
briefly yesterday!!! If my wife only knew the actual value of some of the fires we had this last winter...
Anyone had this problem? Any advice from our more experienced sinewers? Maybe completely round the sides of the limbs? Trap them? The money wasted on materials is painful, but the wasted time much more so, could've taken on a second job and commissioned a couple of real nice bows by now.
Below is a pic of the most recent. I think this backing job came out aweful, but it's hard to keep up the motivation when going into it I have a 100% chance, thus far, that it will end up as roasted meat smelling kindling.