WhistlingBadger
Professional Cat Herder
Retired Moderator ⚒️
2x Tank of the Month 🏆
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I posted about this one on another thread but work is ongoing so I’ll start a thread. I’m trying to make a bow from an extremely wonky piece of Rocky Mountain maple that I cut up on the mountain and roughed out with a hatchet at my camp last summer.
Starting to bend. I love this phase of bow making when the wood starts to spring and feel alive.
After heat treatment. Even more reflex now, which makes for a quick shooting bow but can over stress the wood. It’s uneven too, about 7” on the left side and 10” on the right, so I have to compensate for that when tillering.
Starting to bend. I love this phase of bow making when the wood starts to spring and feel alive.
After heat treatment. Even more reflex now, which makes for a quick shooting bow but can over stress the wood. It’s uneven too, about 7” on the left side and 10” on the right, so I have to compensate for that when tillering.
Hunting is just a normal part of life here; probably about a third of my fifth graders have already taken hunter safety certification, and most of them have parents who hunt. A surprising number of kids, and probably the majority of adults, know how to handle hunting arms without killing themselves or anyone else (unless you count the edible critters downrange, of course). Anyway, a bow like this is not exactly an artillery piece; it might kill a rabbit at short range, but it's mostly for target shooting and learning proper form.