Surrounded as I am by high SD white wood, and gravel roads covered with chert and/or flint, having (hopefully) locked in all the tendons my dog and I can chew on, and having set my semi-literate relatives on a quest for Osage, I have now turned my scrounging attention to the quest for suitable material for arrow shafts.
First question is Youpon Holly, (Ilex vomitaria), variously spelled Yupon. It is a huge woody weed in this area. In dense shade, you can find some pretty straight stalks, albeit with many branches. Anybody used it for arrow shafts?
Next, I remembered a road nearby with cane all over the bar ditches, easily available along the right-of-way. I hoped against hope that it would turn out to be native River Cane (Arundimaria gigantea) with the side stalks having 6-8 leaves. After much research and discussion with our County Extension agent, I now believe it to be what is locally called "Giant Cane" or Arundo Donax--an invasive Asian species, 10-12 feet tall and segmented very much like the AG plants, but with individual leaves coming right off the stalk. Seems to be fairly stiff, even though green, and up to 1/2 inch or more thick. Again, curious whether anyone has experience with the stuff. I am willing to take an uneducated guess that much of what is called River Cane today may be this very similar physically (but very different biologically) plant that no Indian (American, that is) ever saw.
Oh, and I lied--about my dog and I chewing on the deer tendons. I don't have a dog.
Best regards,
Russ