Here are a few pics.
You can see the voids in the 2nd and 3rd pics. The ones on the limb are a bit past the centre of the limb and they are very shallow. The other ones are near the fade and the worst one is almost 1/8" deep. I'm hoping I can fill them with epoxy. You can see the grain in the last two pics. Because palms are related to grasses, the grain is dead straight. The back had a hard crust ( bark? ) on the outside that I had to remove. It was like filing glass. I burned a bit of fat off getting rid of that rind! To this point I had it on a long string at a very low brace, with the string touching the riser. It's still very heavy and there is a lot of tillering left to go. I have to tiller using my belt sander. Rasping tends to tear out fibers from the edges. The crown is not very high, the tree it came from must have been at least a foot in diameter.
Some stats: the bow is 72" long, 1 7/16" wide through the riser and it tapers to 1/2" at the tips. The glued on riser is made from padauk and blackwood and I glued them on with smooth on.
One thing I'm not sure of is what the finished brace height should be. The native bows I saw had no built up risers and I assume they bent through the handle. They are braced at only 1 or 2 inches and the shoot huge arrows that are more like spears. When I make a string, I think I'll make it only one inch or so shorter than the bow and see how that goes.
I'm not building it like a native bow. I plan to cut in a shelf and shoot regular arrows.
Dave.