Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: servicebeary on April 02, 2009, 01:24:44 am
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I recently made it back from a hike along the columbia river with a 1 1/4" piece of wild rose. Just wondering from those who have used rose if it's wide enough to get 30ish pounds out of? oh, and how wide were your bows? thanks, -nick
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should be more than enough for a 30pounder. I'd take a shot and go for 50, but I don't know anything about wild rose. Got some info about the s/g?
Nick
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Funny you should ask. Wild rose makes great arrows. I've been wondering if it would make a bow. Let us know. Jawge
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I've never made a bow with rose either but I don't know why not. Like Nick said, with 1 1/4" you should be able to make a 50# bow so a 30# bow would be less stress on the wood.
I know that rose shoots for arrows will check if not handled properly and especially now that the juices are up. You may try reducing the belly side down a bit but leave the bark on the back until it has had time to dry a bit. Be sure to seal the ends but leave the belly side unsealed so the moisture can escape. You should also clamp or wrap it to a form to insure it will not twist while drying.
Good luck and keep us posted!
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Share a pic and a weight?
I'm pretty sure you can make some kind of bow out of it, even if very low weight and/or short. I don't know, but I think roses have a fairly low specifc gravity. I do know that they have a fair good sized pith and the bark takes up a lot of space, and they shirk a lot when drying, so that 1 1/4" might be a lot less mass available to take the strain.
This is just a thought that may not be worth anything, but it jumped into my head so I'll share it. A backwards bow, belly nicely toasted and burnished to maximize compressive straigth, with a strong cable backing filling up the pith hole, and sillk under that.
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someone posted a nice wild rose bow a while back but I can't remember who?