Trad Gang
Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: Ron LaClair on August 18, 2011, 08:09:00 PM
-
The Yellow Dog Plains is an area north and west of Marquette, Michigan, in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, The Yellow Dog River flows through it, as does the Salmon Trout River. The Yellow Dog Plains is a remote and virtually untouched wilderness. The plains area is a great place to spot and stalk black bears in the fall as they feed on wild berrys. I first hunted the Yellow Dog in 1964 almost 47 years ago. That was when this wild remote area stole my heart.
Our newest Shrew Hill Longbow seems like it belongs in such an environment so I'm naming it "Yellow Dog". The Bow is 68", 48# @ 28". It has a beautiful myrtle wood burl riser, bamboo core with brown glass on the back and white glass on the belly. The white glass has been aged to a golden hue. In keeping with our goal to make our bows slim in the limb with a narrow wedge type grip, this bow is fashioned in that style.
(http://www.shrewbows.com/rons_linkpics/Yellowdog%204.JPG)
(http://www.shrewbows.com/rons_linkpics/Yellowdog%203.JPG)
(http://www.shrewbows.com/rons_linkpics/Yellowdog%202.JPG)
(http://www.shrewbows.com/rons_linkpics/Yellodog%201.JPG)
-
SAWEEEEEEEET!!!!!!!
-
Beatyful! Everybody should have a Hill's style longbow.
-
(http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v249/Killdeer/Sheba/Whatchadoin3-29-00resize600.jpg)
Good name!
Sheba on Killdeer's computer
-
YaHa! Very Nice!
-
Very Nice Ron !!! :thumbsup: And it's actually right handed too. :clapper:
Bill
-
That's a beauty! Can't wait till my name comes up, only 13.5 months left :banghead:
-
Beautiful !!!
That just screams ... " longbow " ... !
-
Awesome!!
Thanks for the photos.
God bless,Mudd
-
Now that's a classic in the make'n..... :thumbsup:
-
:bigsmyl:
-
Wow! Ron, do you think you are going to keep this one? Wonder who will talk you out of it. ;)
-
Oh, I now see it is a righty.
-
Beautiful work.
Darren
-
Ron,
You really nailed it with that grip, I love it!!!
I had a bow with that style grip and it's what I prefer.
I really need to get on your waiting list asap :)
Thanks for sharing the pics of your new sweetheart.
-
Looks beautiful, Ron. As you know, it is not the style that I personally prefer to shoot, but that does not diminish its elegance or beauty. Others who are drawn (pun intended) to that style will love owning one. Now, about that Shrew Safari ... :pray:
Allan
-
Ron,
beautiful bow.....great color combo. vintage white glass is sooo cool. nice work.
Nate
-
TTT for one cool looking longbow!
-
That bow would look a lot better if it was two inches shorter, ten pounds heavier, had the arrow shelf on the other side, and have my name written on it, as in custom made for....
-
I have to admit and I dont have a shrew at the moment but it seems most bowyers are staying with the same bows and Ron you seem to be coming up newer verions all the time,, I know you shot a hill style before from pics I seen but I never thought you would produce one, also with the gear, the knives and hawks theres ONE thing you need to do and thats come up with the Shrew broadhead...
oh and sweet bow you have there..
-
Thank you Ted.
As for a broadhead, there's a lot of them available in just about every size, style, and weight imaginable. Over the years I've tried most of them at one time or another. I killed my first deer 50 years ago with an M-A 3 blade head and I still remember that first blood trail. :eek: Like I said I've used a lot of different broadheads but I keep coming back to a big 2 blade. In the 50's I used the Goshawk head. They came in two sizes and I liked the bigger one. When the Ben Pearson Deadhead came out also in two sizes, I used the biggest one. I took a lot of deer with the Deadhead, it was like a flying broad-Ax.. :eek: I used the Simmons Tree Shark for awhile until I had a hard time getting them. For the last several years I've been using the Ace Super Express 200gr. and I like that head a lot. I picked up a pack of Tuff-heads this year and will give them a try this fall...gotta see if those single bevel's are as good as they claimed.. :archer:
-
Hey buddy,
That looks like a beauty of a Hill style bow. It looks like a right hander, but it seems a little early to prep a prototype bow for the Shrew gang to test at camp??? Is that for a customer or are you sending it around to the Shrew Crew to break in before the official camp prototype test??? (hint:I've got some Acme Premium cedar shafts I got from John Grumley before his passing and they ought to work nicely out of that bow!) ;)
-
p.s.
I think Loren Willey would approve of the name and inspiration for the name.
-
Ray,
You better watch out. You shoot one of those "Hilly" bows and you might be forced to find a way to hunt with the "SHREW: extended length longbow" LOL! :laughing:
-
Jeff,
I have a 68" Howard Hill Tembo that I got in 1978 that I killed my first deer and first bear with. I still pull it out from time to time for fun. That bow is only 57#, but back when I was younger and didn't know any better, I shot a 86# Howard Hill Big Five. I've had various other longbows over the years, but since 1999 I've shot Super Shrew longbows for all my hunting.
-
This is a great looking bow, it's definetly on my list :^)
Darren
-
I notice the handle is straight and is tapered from front to back like Howard Hill did his!(making a sharper place where your bow hand fits) I have always wondered if this Hill handle was more forgiving than a regular straight thicker handle or a locator grip? Ken
-
Ken,
Depends on if you hold it correctly. The wedge on the belly of the grip gives you a locator for the center of the bow and the meaty part of the thumb.
You shoot the grip with the heel of the hand down and even pressure on the belly in the center. The "wedge" gives you a locator. You have to grip the bow right. Some folks who try this grip try to straight wrist the bow, and that form does not work well with this grip. It is a very accurate and forgiving wrist position when done properly.
-
Originally posted by Ray Lyon:
Jeff,
I have a 68" Howard Hill Tembo that I got in 1978 that I killed my first deer and first bear with. I still pull it out from time to time for fun. That bow is only 57#, but back when I was younger and didn't know any better, I shot a 86# Howard Hill Big Five. I've had various other longbows over the years, but since 1999 I've shot Super Shrew longbows for all my hunting.
I figured you had shot alot of longbows over the years. Just messin with ya a little. Shrews in all forms are really cool bows.
-
Nice bow!
-
Jeff, messin is what we like to do best. And yes, I've had a mess of longbows over the years!!
-
Ray,
You an me both! Too many bows to even count. Hope your coming season presents you with many opportunities.
-
nate steen put that grip on my 3d bow it is akiller grip when it is sized correctly i think that hh had a reason for this grip it works .
-
Lookin' good!
-
Great, great!!!! Nice job, Ron!! I know, the old Hill style bow will return to full glory soon....lol Because I feel, the longbow is now outtuned, outperformed, they are like longcurves, not bad bows, but not really long bows - so the folks will remember the old style bows - performing, if well built, like modern high tech longbows. :o ))
-
That is unbelievably beatiful bow!!!
Wow!
-
Ron, know the area well. When my hunting buddies boy was getting smarter at Northern Michigan University, about 15 plus years ago, we did alot of stomping between Marquette and Big Bay. Special place for sure and you couldn't have chosen a better name.
:goldtooth:
After a day of running the dogs on grouse and woodcock we'd take em to the Yellow Dog for a swim to cool off.