(cough... splutter
)
All this is just my opinion:-
There are basically 2 sorts of stave:- "stick bow" stuff and logs/trunks.
The ideal log is about 6-8" diameter. Much bigger and you'll struggle to handle it, but of course you can split it on site if it is too big.
With the small stick bow stuff... and it can come from anywhere, hedge row, church yard, garden Yew. The best option is to identify the cleanest face and chop or saw away the other side for about 1/3-1/2 of the thickness. This will help stop it splitting as it dries... the splits will radiate from centre to the cut away face rather than spoiling your clean back. Paint the ends and an inch or so, leave to season somewhere dry and airy.
Logs:- some people think it's macho to split 'em with axe and wedges.... yes it's lots of fun and good exercise. It's also wasteful of wood. If you have access to a bandsaw/chainsaw or a trained beaver on a stick
, use that instead. Always saw to give you the best possible half log stave rather than two bad ones. Each half can if the log is big enough be sawn again to give quarter staves.
At this point pick up your quarter stave, twirl it round your head and marvel at what a lethal weapon it would be as opposed to the quarterstaffs you see in the Robin Hood movies that are little more than broom handles. Now stop messing about, paint the ends and put 'em somewhere dry and airy to season.
Study logs carefully, even stuff that may appear to be scrap can yield a good billet and you'll soon find you have a stash of usefull billets. Don't throw Yew away in haste... you can always weed out your stash later.
Oh, and where to find it? Make it your business to locate every Yew tree within a 2 mile radius of where you live. Contact, tree surgeons, Council parks departments, conservation groups etc. Frankly, anyone who says there is no decent English Yew isn't looking, or hasn't discovered the difference between looking and actually seeing. In the post below, you'll see a relatively small trunk that became a 130# warbow.
https://bowyersdiary.blogspot.com/2012/10/applying-to-cut-yew-and-general-progress.htmlFunnilly enough I've just made a short video about Yew staves
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hon6o-zk7Jo&t=49sDel