Here she is,
the first three are firewood, but i sure learned alot
The goal was to build a practical bow that would last. The tree picked me, and so it began.
66" nock to nock, it took a pretty good set considering my patience was much shorter than the time required to cure, but she will have three bros and sis's which are still drying.
I steamed the handle once as the string laid a good 2" outside the handle. The rawhide arrow rest was my own idea, seemed practical, anyone else use this?
Tillering wise i'm medium happy. the bottom limb was beautiful from the get go, the top had the knot, and I felt like I had to thin it way more than the bottom to get a match.
comments are welcome, but you know the whole artist is never done idea. I am half considering taking an inch off the top limb making it the bottom and refinishing it. but considering it has already been named, renaming is sketchy at best.
cheers,
Jamie
ps. couldn't have done it without you guys on this site and the TBB.
I've got plenty more yew drying and every tree I see is weighed as a potential bow, does this mean i'm hooked?
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