John- Yes, I had thought about the bugs we have a history of termites around here too. Now you got me worried....thanks. :D
Thanks for the link, I saved it to my favorites for future referrence.
I wish I had a bigger band saw, all we have is one of those small craftsman ones. I'll figure out something, if nothing else I'll get the best ones put up and the rest I could haul over to the barn and maybe they would be ok in there?
Originally posted by Osagetree:
Kinda late in the conversation to butt in,,, but I will if you don't mind.
I like your enthusiasm! Your gonna make this one work I bet. You have a good stave there but from what I can see you need to go down some more rings. Counting your pincil mark as #1, count down to the fith ring. Go at least to there. But, I would go to #11,,, yep that 1st big thick ring. It looks to me you can go there and still have more than enough for a hunting bow.
Going to #11 will also remove mass and let it dry quicker. Two birds so to speak!
Did you chalk line it? Looks mighty striaght?
On your other bow... It looks real nice and I bet you were sick! I know,,, we all know that feeling. But life goes on and you're gonna go on to hunt... with a bow you've made!
When I started out hacking on osage and for sometime I thought,,, & like you said previously,,, "Once I get it squared up"....... Forget all that man! The wood will be what it wants to be. You've just gotta help it along a bit. Follow the vertical grain, swim around the knots, flow with the growth of that tree. And,,, keep in mind,,, tree's grow round not square. Someone wise once told me; "There's nothing square about a selfbow or anything else that comes natural. Ever see a tree that has square edges? Selfbows should be smooth and everything rounded off real nice like."
Keep us posted!
Thanks Osage. It sounds like you've been in my shoes before? Yes, I was and still am sick about the bow, but you know what....this was just a practice run anyway and I never dreamed it would make it all the way to a shootable hunting bow. So with that said, I'm fairly proud of my virgin voyage into Bowyerism.
I think it will be ok, when I get some flax and do a good patch job on it this bow might be around for another few years...who knows?
I've got my Bear Grizzly recurve to fall back on so I'm still going to hunt traditional, but I was really anxious to carry my "Own" hand made longbow. Hopefully it will still happen.
I didn't and won't let it get me down. I was pretty bummed out last night and after sleeping on it, I jumped out of bed this morning, got some coffee, and headed straight for the pasture to pick out a new stave. This was a learning experience and I'm a little wiser because of it, so it's actually a blessing because I won't make the same mistake on my nearly perfect stave.
Yes, I did put a string on it and you can't imagine how straight this stave is.
I'm saving this one for winter when there's nothing else going on and take my time with it. It's going to be sweet! I want everything perfect on that one. I might be asking for ideas and designs when the time comes to start on it, like riser shape, length, shelf or no shelf, limb width, everything.