I finished my first bow, which shoots pretty well for something I've never made before, and I'm currently looking at a second red oak stave with essentially perfect grain. It's sitting behind me here in the living room. (Understanding wife.)
I can tell I need to make this one a little heavier than the first, as I can certainly draw more than it ended up being. What I'm wondering is do you know a way to make the roughing out part go faster? Is there some way to saw the wood so that a large part of the initial shaping is done and I can move on to tillering? It took me weeks of cutting on this first bow because I can't do a lot in a stretch. If I had found a way to cut off that wood on the belly of the limbs instead I could have been shooting a long time ago, as tillering wasn't the black art I thought it was.
Anybody got any ideas? I like bow building, but my arthritis is currently complaining a LOT, and I can't keep using my breakthrough pain pills for "I tried to carve a bow in a day." Also, I want to tell all of you who have posted in encouragement that this is all your fault. Now I have to build arrows too.