With no damage to the back an underlay would be the best fix, the crack is in a non bending part of the tip so a failure is not likely. For the best result you need to heat bend your patch to perfectly match curvature of your bend exactly, you can make the patch slightly thicker than you need and shape it after the glue up. File off the cracked wood, use a sanding block to make the ground off portion as level as you can, feather your flat place back to the limb gradually. I would superglue the crack closed before you start grinding the belly flat just to keep from splintering the crack more, you are still going to grind off all the crack but need to stabilize it before you start.
You will need a form to bend your patch, I made several for the fix in the picture before I got it right, I used dry heat for the bend. Put your patch on the limb without glue and hold it up to the light, you should see little or no light between the patch and the limb before you glue-up. Your fit will be easy because the limb will pull in to match the patch or vice versa. With a double patch like I made the first was easy but the second had to exactly match the bend created by the first.
All you need is the underlay part of this type of patch.
The bending form;