I have been procastinating over this bow forever now. Pat sent me the stave about three years ago and he made a nice bow out of the other half of the pole. I procastinated for a long time before starting then decided to try my favorite design, the holmie. The half pole had about three inches of reflex and I had never worked with deflex before. I decrowned it and shaped it to the Holmie shape (kind of), the handle section was too thin for the kind I wanted so glued on a piece of scrap oak and was afraid it would pop off so wrapped it with gut hafting material and sei it in tbIII glue. I guess I got carried away with the floor tillering as by the time I put a string on it it was already way under weight, I piked it a bit and ended up with 62" n-n and then it tried to lift a splinter on one of the many small knots I had decrowned thru. So it gets to sit around for ever and I finally decide to back it and see what happens. Put on some sinue (ugly job of it) on the working part of the limbs and it sits around for a month or so before I string it up and see what I have. about 45# @ 29# 1 7/16" wide to mid limb and iefle tower shape to 3/8" nocks. Keeps a bit over two inches of reflex. I am not real happy with the tiller but don't to loose any more draw weight. Seems to shoot fairley quick for such a light bow, has no hand shock, and sends a 525 grain broadhead arrow about 157 yards. My first bow with a little deflex and wide tips and the same weight sent the same arrow 135 yards. A well made 50# osage bow of mine shot the asame arrow about 165 yards. Not an elk slayer by any means but I think maybe I learned some things with this bow.
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