No, much longer. With a 30" draw that would be too short for a stiff handled Osage bow. The basic guidance for top tier woods like Osage, hickory, yew and others is to make each limb the same length as your draw length at a minimum. With enough experience and bows behind you that can be cheated some, but the bows longevity and performance is the usual price for doing so. That's with your best woods. Junipers are not in that category. To get juniper to handle the same weight and length of draw requires a lot more length, width or preferably both. Even with the proper dimensions the tiller has to be very precise in comparison to the better woods. If you're going to make an unbacked, stiff handled juniper bow that is in the neighborhood of 50#@30" you need to make it longer. Especially since it appears to be that you are limited in width. If you figure 8" to 9" stiff section for handle and fades and about 33" per working limb to compensate for the narrow width, you are going to need every bit of your 75" stave. The juniper bow I just made is 2 3/4" wide at the fades, with 27" long working limbs for a 26" draw. It is right at the very minimum dimensions for what I'm asking of it. You're wanting 4" more draw with half the width I had to work with. You have to make up the difference in length