- Cut the tree as close to the ground as possible and then cut an 80" butt log.
- Quarter the butt log using wedges and sledge and then split the quarter to make 8 staves. Seeal the ends with shellac.
Here's a wood cutting and splitting expedition I wen to n a couple years ago:
Wood 2009 - Take one of your staves and peel the bark and most of the sapwood. You can leave one ring of sapwood to make your ELB look like yew wood. Here is a very important thing that you cannot ignore. DO THIS STEP ALL AT ONCE AND THEN SHELLAC THE ENTIRE PEELED STAVE with a couple coats right away.
Here's how I rough out a bow and chase a ring:
Roughout For an ELB (English Long Bow) out of mulberry I would go with:
- 72" NTN (nock-to-nock)
- 1-1/4" wide for the entire middle of the bow all the way to midlimb and then taper to 1/2" nocks.
- start with a square cross section, i.e. about 1-14/" thickness and then knock off the corners
- tiller for a bendy handled bow.
Here's my tillering tute.
Tillering 101 Have fun. Post pics and stories.