While waiting for my hemlock branch bow project to dry more, I decided to build a Meare Heath style bow out of a nice white pine board I had on hand. This is my second shot at an MH style bow with some obvious differences from the original construction. Though all the width and length dimensions will all be the same as reported for the original.
At approx. 75" long and 2-3/4" wide in hardwood/whitewood (vs the original yew) this makes a highly overbuilt bow for my draw specs of 40# and 27". My experience of the last version I tried was that when shooting, the bow felt heavy in the hand and just generally sluggish. It had a laminated setback handle to mimic the original's severe carved grain violation in that area. I reinforced the new handle with flax as an experiment, but the handle failed, was repaired with more reinforcing and about 100 arrows were shot before it failed again.
With the performance experience I wasn't enthused about building another MH bow, even if I went with a straight or bent nonviolated grain handle. There's a lot of mass in the outer portion of the limbs because the width is carried high, and the bow is just generally heavy in hardwood. It might feel faster and more suitable at a 90 pound draw as was estimated for the original, but I can't manage that, and frankly for my usual usage of backyard target shooting, 40 pounds is what I really want.
I do love the MH itself, the appearance and the connection with an ancient bow, so I was thinking, if I were to build another one, would it make sense to do one for a 40 pound draw in a lighter wood like pine? Or conversely, if you were to choose to build a white pine bow, wouldn't you make it extra long long and wide? Since those two thoughts seemed to coincide, and since there was a pine board on hand, why not give it a try? This time the handle won't be set back, in hopes that it won't repeat the handle breakage of the first bow (where the real MH broke as well) but I will mimic the distinctive keel of the original extending into the fades.
First step was marking out a template using the MH measurements on some scrap 3/8" foam insulation board, snapping a line down the board (following the grain diagonally on this particular board), and then tracing 4 times around the foam pattern to get the outline of the bow.