For some reason I couldn't get good accuracy with a Canebrake, but the Patriot TD and Longhunter were perfect for me. My brother and my son loved their Canebrakes.
Jeffrey made the Bamboo Longhunter and the Patriot TD recurve. Martin made the Red Elm Longhunter, and I'm pretty sure Martin made the Canebrake, too. After Dan sold Archery Traditions, the new owners changed the bows and I lost interest in what they were doing. They didn't understand bow design like Dan did, and started making bows differently. Dan disdained what he called "cabinet-maker bows", made by folks who stressed looks over performance, or who just didn't understand how to design for performance. Dan's bows were never made for show, but they were beautiful to me because they performed beautifully!
Owen Jeffrey did build bows for Bear. Dan and Owen went way back, and although they didn't always see eye-to-eye on bow design, Jeffrey did make them to Dan's design. For instance, Jeffrey wouldn't use FF strings on their bows in those days, but Dan designed his tips for them. Dan also changed the orientation of the limbs to the riser slightly, to get more power from the bow with the FF strings.
Dan also altered the shelf design in the last couple of years, and the last Patriots and Longhunters that he sold had the shelf reduced for better arrow clearance under hunting conditions, when form may not be perfect. I still remember clearly the day in the Superceder plant when Dan took MY bow to the belt sander and sanded off most of the shelf, so that the arrow was supported only by a small rest on the back side, and the rest of the shelf tapered off to the belly side. It allowed better arrow flight when the release was sloppy, and also allowed a wider range of spines to shoot well. After our test work, he had his production bows made that way. He went so far as to actually extend the rest on his personal bow so that it projected past the back by building it out with putty. It worked beautifully, but it looked so strange that he didn't try it on the commercial bows.
The new owners of Archery Traditions didn't like the look of the cutaway shelves, and changed them back. Looks won out over performance.