I’ve got nothing but great things to say about the women who’ve attended our bow building workshops.
Some of our most proficient, eager to learn and hardworking attendants have been women.
A pre interview goes a long way. Make sure people understand how labor intensive bowmaking is. I’d say one of the number one comments we get after roughing out bow blanks on the first day is “wow, I knew it would be work, but I had no idea it was that much work”. We don’t allow anyone under the age of 15 for this reason, and anyone under 19 needs adult supervision in Nebraska.
I’d say most of the guys who are running classes for free are finding their issues in that factor alone. Free bows have no value, nor are free instructors typically valued by the masses. There’s nothing at stake for a dilly-dallier to walk away from something that wasn’t paid for, and that’s soon discovered to be difficult.
You should be charging at least a few hundred dollars a person for your time, wear on tools, and materials. That’s being very generous, and wouldn’t even cover the overhead of our 3-day classes (we do go a bit crazy with the meals, let everyone use quality/expensive hand tools, etc).
I bet the majority of everyone’s aforementioned problems would’ve stopped at “free”. There’s no shame in asking what you feel is appropriate for decades of study and expertise, multiple days of instructing, your workspace, tools, countless hours of stave splitting, careful storage/preparation of the bow wood, meals (if you feed everyone), a fun and immersive experience... on, and on… and a nice shooting bow at the end of it all.
Edited for grammar errors.