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Hawthorn for warbows?

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meanewood:
I must say, my hawthorn bow is incredibly smooth to draw and I'm looking forward to finishing the second one in a couple of months when fully seasoned.

I'm going to follow the idea of leaving the bark on which should add to the incredible character of this wood!

stuckinthemud:
Really interested in how that one turns out. My only attempt at a hawthorn bow went bang, but it was an extremely characterful stave and I was far too rough/impatient with it; totally my fault it broke - also, it was a flat bow design, maybe hawthorn suits a square cross-section better?? I think, though I stand to be corrected, most of the failures I have heard about have been flat-bows?

meanewood:

--- Quote from: stuckinthemud on December 15, 2016, 12:05:13 pm ---Really interested in how that one turns out. My only attempt at a hawthorn bow went bang, but it was an extremely characterful stave and I was far too rough/impatient with it; totally my fault it broke - also, it was a flat bow design, maybe hawthorn suits a square cross-section better?? I think, though I stand to be corrected, most of the failures I have heard about have been flat-bows?

--- End quote ---

That's the problem when using a less common wood,  its harder to get experienced advise from others!
All I can say is try a safer design, 35mm wide, 25mm deep and 75in or longer with a slightly rounded back and belly but with a good rounding of the edges.

stuckinthemud:
Sounds like a plan. Will have a go in the spring, it will have been seasoning for nearly two years by then

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