Well, it finally happened. I broke the first bow I had started and it was a hickory backed cherry. The board blank ws glued up and given to me by a friend in the obsession and I had started it about a month ago. I had a feeling it might be weak. I had gouged it on the side pretty good learning to reduce wood with the drawknife and the wood seemed real light and I thought it might be too dry, so I had set it aside after it was roughed out and reduced to bending and ready to go on the short string. I decided that I would start a hickory pyramid and use what I had learned roughing out the cherry. The whole thing right now has been becoming proficiant with the hand tools. I had made some mistakes with the cherry early on that I wanted to do over and have thus gotten better at on the hickory. I got the hickory to the point where it was ready to go on the short string and decided that I would go ahead and finish the tiller on the cherry as a practice run so I can get the hickory right. I'm glad I did. I had one limb that was a little flat in the midlimb and had just about worked it all out. It was supposed to be a 45#@26" 55" Hickory backed Cherry. I had been excersing it 15-20 times between scrape sessions( good little resistance work out) but had never pulled it beyond the 45# throught the tiller process. I had it to 45@24" and decided to see what the weight was at 26" and POW, thar she blows. Made a big ole bang and the wife hollers from the front room on the other side of the wall " are you allright" and I'm stoked. I broke my first bow and I'm stoked. I new that I had overcome some good obsticals and have no regrets. I now have more confiedence than ever to finish up the hickory, however I don't think I will pull past the target weight again. My tilleiring tree encapsolates the handle area and it performed well. Flying debris was contained to a minor blast area...lol I was going to try and post the pictures of it but I'm not sure how that works, so enough for now. Danny