A few of you may have been following along with the chokecherry experiment/build (found here with build pics...
http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,63850.0.html). I was shooting for at least 45# draw weight, managed to meet that goal while learning a few things along the way. This was the first bow I successfully built out of chokecherry. Chokecherry seems to have a slight twist to the grain and tears pretty easily. You can avoid tearing if you make your shaving strokes in the opposite direction. The reason I assume it has twisting grain is because, for example, I can shave down the right side of the top limb starting at the handle, but to shave down the left side of the top limb I would have to shave towards the handle to prevent tearing. Grain twist is the only thing I can think of that would cause this? Maybe someone else knows what is going on?
This was also the first bow I've made leaving the bark on, which turned out beautiful, just below the outside surface of the bark on chokecherry is a grain pattern about 1mm thick. If you shave to much you loose the grain pattern. I also discovered that you wont get that pattern if you try to shave the outter bark while the wood is still wet, so keep that in mind if you want to try to keep the pattern.
Another first for me is doing a tip overlay, this has an elk antler tip overlay. I think it turned out pretty good, but I might get a belt sander before doing it again to save time.
Here is the final result. 50#@30"