Main Discussion Area > Around the Campfire
Twit
Hawkdancer:
+2, Pearl! Also agree with Del! Btw, Twit is Canadian and British for a$$h**e!
Hawkdancer
Eric Krewson:
My biggest disappointment as a bowyer was when a guy, last name Baker from Birmingham, ordered a bow from me. The first one I made broke, the next came in under poundage and the third was as good a bow as I ever made.
I sent him an email that his bow was ready, no answer, more emails, no answers. I looked up his phone number and called, no answer, another call, no answer.
I kept calling and he finally answered, in a curt voice he said "I have a lot going on and am not interested in the bow anymore" and hung up.
I had a month of work in making him a wonderful bow, he could have let me know he wasn't interested a month earlier and I would have been OK with that but he didn't.
vinemaplebows:
These are the reasons my bow building for others came to a end, you can take what I got (anymore completed bows as a gift) or you get nothing. Peoples expectations override reality, especially those that come from the glass world, no offense to glass lovers. I have had people demand the rest be on the WRONG side, completed it, the two months later want a new bow with the rest on the appropriate side...…...for free! Nope!
DC:
Fretting over this kind of stuff is why most of the bows I've made are still leaning against the wall. I did sell one. The guy wanted a left handed bow for his son, didn't care whether it was glass or wood. He couldn't find one. That struck me as odd but I'd never bought bow so what did I know. I said I'd make him one. I'd given a few other kids at the range bows so I said it would be free. He insisted that I take something. I just ignored his offers and made the bow. When it came time to hand over the bow he handed me $300. Well I have a rule, if someone offers to buy me a dinner or a drink or something I will refuse three times. If they still insist they obviously need the money less than me. He took the bow, I took the money and shortly after that they left town. Never heard from them again. I still feel quilty and if a tall left handed fellow ever approaches me and says his bow broke, I'll make him another. Selling stuff is just too stressful.
JEB:
Pearl gifted my wife one of his bows and if you try and take it from her that little pollack would beat the crap out of you. She has maybe 10 recurves and longbows and uses the only pearl bow she owns. And she shoots lights out with it. (R
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