david w, I made a few comments on the first page (about 2/3 of the way down), about Holly in general, and I pretty much find it that way to work with. I don't know a lot about it as a finished bow - yet - LOL. I do have one youth weight bow out of a smaller yet Holly sapling that my friend Mike made. He gave it to me as a rough bow to finish shaping, sanding and finishing - to use for any kids or ladies that I might need it for. I liked the way it finished up and it shoots pretty nice, though I don't get to pull it to my full draw. I would think it will be pretty consistant and tough for the right person. I loved the way it finished up - I did it natural, with Tru-oil, and put some Native American decorations on it in Black. I'll copy what I said earlier in the thread, here also:
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For those who wonder about Holly, from what I've been told about Holly (here in NC), it may not make the fastest or flashiest bow, but it definitely will be a strong and lasting bow, if done right (watching the knots). I like the look and feel of the wood, when you hit clear patches - smile. It's fairly dense, and the fibres seem to be quite interwoven. It rasps/files well and sands nicely - IMO. Scrapes well too, except for the knots. Hope that helps. I believe either Censu or Asier (on Paleoplanet) said that they used a lot of Holly where they live (Malta and Spain).
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BTW I did get my carport/workshop closed in on two sides (all I intended to close in) and got my tillering tree set back up, except for the graph boards (behind the bow limbs). I'll put those back up as soon as it warms up - just a tad. You'll notice it in future pics, once I get to tillering again.