Took a hiatus after my first few BBOs and now that I have my new shop set up, giving my first Osage self bow a try. Reading books and watching videos so I don't blow the limited staves I have. It seems there are as many ways to chase a ring as to skin a cat. Dean Torges (Hunting the Osage Bow) decrowns a stave along it's length down to a target ring, leaving bark and sapwood on each side of the "trough" to be removed in subsequent passes. With each pull of the draw knife he reaches further into the uncut wood, pulling towards the back revealed by the previous swipe thereby reducing the risk of tearing into the future back of the bow. Stim Wilcox (The Art of Making Self Bows) on the other hand exposes the target ring on either side of one end of the stave by "trapping" the stave and then removing the peak to the same ring. He does this a few inches along the stave on one end, pulling towards the closest end until the entire ring is exposed at the one end. He then works the ring in the opposite direction, pulling the drawknife away from he exposed back and into the wood to be removed in short upward strokes. His reasoning for this is to avoid accidentally cutting into the back with an over zealous stroke of the drawknife. In the Clay Hayes video recently posted, I noticed he too pulls towards the wood to be removed with a steeply angled "dull" drawknife. Torges and Wilcox both seem to prefer a sharp drawknife.
In my first pass, I used the Torges method of cutting towards the exposed wood but found myself frequently "nicking" the back ring. I am considering the Wilcox approach as I work down the ring or two. How do you all do it?