![]() |
Also Osage orange as it ages takes on a patina and darkens to a deep orangish-red when exposed to the air.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
Laminated bows require a lot of tools and the wood laminations are getting expensive if you don't have a wood planer. Then you have to build a curing oven. Make a Limb press and purchase a lot of clamps. Not to mention dangerous caustic airline grade epoxys. |
I have nothing but respect for those who keep these old arts alive, srvy... its Jedi level cool
|
Many now start out with board bows from hardwoods purchased at a lumbar yard. I didn't go that direction. We own property near Maysville Mo and some in SE Ks where good bow woods are abundant. Osage is the best followed by I think Black Locust and Hickory. Also I am hearing that Hackberry makes a nice bow but haven't tried it yet but its all over this area.
|
Quote:
My Dad was of the generation that had nothing and learned to repair and fix stuff if you wanted it. He taught me and my brothers a lot but he didn't make bows. I think this is why I took to it it was my deal alone. |
Sec is your man for home made bows and arrows. I’ve got one of his arrows.
|
As a somewhat n00b to camping...
...JetBoil is amazing. ...freeze everything in your cooler (or at least make sure it's all cold) before adding everything and use big blocks of ice. ...organize the shit out of your routine. Camping box with all the camping things, checklists, packing routine, etc. ...noticed pre-making meals earlier in the thread. Especially breakfast, when you might be recovering from the night before, like breakfast burritos cooked over the fire. ...small lanterns are very convenient. As well as 5 gallon buckets of water. |
Quote:
Yes on water, always keep it nearby... a milk jug gallon goes with me everywhere |
Well this is what I have found so far as most are from film camera needs scanned and some are on a Photobucket account that's locked unless I pay there stupid fee for overage.
This was my first laminated recurve under construction hell back when I was renting a house in the Northland. The two osage longbows the red leather handle is mine and the black handle I made for my brother. The arrow is a field tip arrow from port Orford cedar blanks I straightened stained crested and fletched. The blanks were bought from 3 Rivers Archery. |
I must've shut it down for the night just before you posted those, srvy
Very nice work, you're apparently the Real McCoy, my faves are the Osage long bows... that is sleek and sexy |
Quote:
Those two longbows are the best I've done and were perfect staves. That the biggest battle choosing the wood ya never know what ya gonna get. Drying the billets takes 60 to 90 days minimum. Hell, there are people selling staves now at a hundred bucks a stave. Don't know that they get that but you see it on eBay. |
Best 12 minutes of my day, I'd spend a summer on it
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/JejnkdtmjWk" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:35 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.