I have a yew stave, it was pipe straight, 57" long, 2" diameter, very few knots. When I split it, it split with a gentle heli twist of about 30° and sprang into 2 inches of deflex so, several courses of heat treatment will be needed. Sapwood is 8mm (1/4") thick. At the handle the stave is 21 mm thick.. When I flexed the stave, the bark popped off. I've never had that happen, I always take it off with drawknives and chase a ring. The top of the sapwood is a nice dark brown and I'd kinda like to keep it like that but is that the best idea, should I be reducing the sapwood for better performance? Also, is the bark popping off a bad sign concerning possible problems with the wood?
I guess as its so thin, a flatbow is the best design? or is hollow limb better on a high crown like this? Parallel sides or constant taper?