I have bee building bows and arrows for some years now. First some arrows with bamboo shafts,
A roughed out handle on a glued up re/de bamboo backed Ipe.
Next the re/de up on my tiller tree. The bow came out at 62lbs at 29 inches of draw.
Havent in a few years. But I used to use compound till I found my grandfather's long bow. Wont hunt with anything but a long bow for archery season. Man I miss hunting.
i have probably made 50-60 bows in the past eight years. I'm moving away from the laminated bamboo backed bows towards the more primative solid wood "self" bows. I've got two black locust ones that I am working on now. Here is a laminated long bow on the left and a pignut hickory with steam bent recurves on the right. The long bow is 58# at 29" and the hickory is 55# at 29". Got to work on bows in the winter when there is low humidity because of wood heat in my studio. High humidity will cause the bow limbs to take a unwanted set as the wood is unsealed during the making.
Dang this is a cool thread Rodger! Beautiful work bro! I shoot a compound. Can't imagine how much harder it is to shoot a recurve. What kind of fps do you get out of those?
Dang this is a cool thread Rodger! Beautiful work bro! I shoot a compound. Can't imagine how much harder it is to shoot a recurve. What kind of fps do you get out of those?
Don't have a way of measuring fps but The bows can snap arrow right sharply at 25 yards. No sights on these beasts got to pick a small spot, look, hit your anchor and release.
Here is a plains style quiver that I made out of elk, trade cloth, and tile beads.
Some of my bows
A shot of the draw on a red oak bow I made from a $3 Home Depot board.
Very cool, I would love to get something like this to bow fish with. I'd have to be able to rig a reel on it some how though. What ya think, is it possible?
I've been shooting for about 26 or27 years now. Strictly European traditional, as in 14th century English longbow. Right now I'm shooting a 95 lb yew stick with sewn fletchings/self-nocked arrows tipped with hand-made bodkin points. Haven't been hunting since I moved to Washington, but used to take whitetail deer, feral hog, and the occasional turkey back in Ohio.
that's a lot of nice looking bows hanging up in the OP's pics....
I've been shooting for about 26 or27 years now. Strictly European traditional, as in 14th century English longbow. Right now I'm shooting a 95 lb yew stick with sewn fletchings/self-nocked arrows tipped with hand-made bodkin points. Haven't been hunting since I moved to Washington, but used to take whitetail deer, feral hog, and the occasional turkey back in Ohio.
that's a lot of nice looking bows hanging up in the OP's pics....
Washington is supposed to be good hunting. Have fun when ya get started.
I've been shooting for about 26 or27 years now. Strictly European traditional, as in 14th century English longbow. Right now I'm shooting a 95 lb yew stick with sewn fletchings/self-nocked arrows tipped with hand-made bodkin points. Haven't been hunting since I moved to Washington, but used to take whitetail deer, feral hog, and the occasional turkey back in Ohio.
that's a lot of nice looking bows hanging up in the OP's pics....
I've never worked with yew and I've never built a war bow. Maybe i need to start looking at them a little harder.
Jay i find shooting a nice way of relaxing. I'll PM you the company that I buy most of my supplies from.
I'll confess that I started with the stronger bows due to a testosterone poisoning problem I had when I was younger. A friend and I got into a pecker contest with Mary Rose style bows and man sized targets at 100 to 200 yards. Good fun!
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