Hi all, this is not a post about an amazing bow, more of a documentation of privet as a bow wood. There is a lot of it around and you don't hear of many bows being made from it, so just adding to the online knowledge base of what I consider to be a pretty good bow wood. I have made three bows from it so far and in my opinion it is very good (compared to others I have access to at least).
Design in part inspired by Bubby's "tree to bow in 30 days"
http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,52048.0.htmlSelf privet sapling bow, handle depth is the full thickness of the sapling ~1 1/8" in the middle of the stave.
Pulls 40# at 26" 63" ntn
4" stiff handle, 1.5" fades
Flipped the tips with dry heat.
Little self pin nocks.
She is a sweet wee shooter, could go all day and not feel a thing. After a good session she follows the string by maybe a 1/4"
finished her up with a light sand and a rub down of some beeswax based boot waterproofing compound, still a couple of hatchet nicks in the belly by the fades.
I would have liked her a bit heavier but I had reduced the stave down to the pith for drying (you can still see the pith in the limbs) and this was all she wrote. managed to gain a few lbs with a good heat treat on the belly but couldn't get it past 40. the other option would be to pike her limbs a bit, maybe half an inch or an inch off each tip, but then i would start to wory about taking too much set so I'll leave her as is and try a bit heavier on the next one.
Initially I left the bark on the back of the stave, it was going well until i reached 24" on the tiller tree then it popped off and I lost about 6 or 7 lbs, annoying, but lesson learned.
Cheers,
Zach
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