It is very dry where I live...too dry, and that is why I am wanting to build some hickory bows now. OK. So I will have enough manpower available this afternoon...tomorrow afternoon at the latest. Here's my plan...please comment if you see anything that needs re-thinking!
I'm now in Ft. Payne, AL until Monday, so I'm planning on pulling the beast out and splitting it in half at minimum to start the drying process.
If I do any splitting, I'll attempt to strip the bark off...hoping it is still wet enough under the bark to strip it...as I want to have it pull off for clean stave/bowbacks vs having to drawknife the bark off and risk screwing up the stave/bow backs during that debarking. I say this, because when I remove bark off of seasoned Osage staves, it's a PITA and as the bark comes off, it will often run under and pull up hunks of sapwood. It's easy to see in osage, and it looks like it will not be easy to see on hickory. I'd rather not get into having to chase whitewood rings.
So, If I split it in half, is there any reason I shouldn't juts go ahead and 1/4 it or 1/8 it...or split it out into however many staves I can get? It's at least a 20" diameter log...it barely fits under my tonneau cover.
If I split it all the way down into staves....I'm curious about what you are talking about, Hamish, regarding the kerfing part. Are you saying to use the circular saw on the split staves to make a cut into the side of the split staves (along a growth ring) to split out additional "inner wood staves?" If so, I'm guessing that trying to split off the inner staves from the originally split staves will not be as easy as hammering a draw knife into the end of the stave at one growth ring and having that split run along that growth ring for the length of the stave. I've hand luck getting small child bow staves and removing unwanted bulk belly wood from dry osage staves n this manner, but I'm guessing hickory won't play so nice?
Regardless, I do not want to waste these inner-tree staves, as each split whether it splits into 1/6, 1/8, or possibly even 1/12...each original stave should have two bows. If the log splits in a reasonably controlled manner, each stave should be ~10" deep give or take an inch or two.
If I am able to get these inner tree, core staves, I undoubtably will have to chase a ring on each of them. I've chased a ton of osage rings, and they are very obvious and the process fairly simple on most decent osage staves. Is the early wood on hickory crunchy as it is on Osage? I know the visual difference is not going to be as obvious...especially with my aging eyes, so I'm hoping the feel will be similar. Any tips on chasing a hickory growth ring will be much appreciated,
Pat B...you are absolutely correct about my home climate being ultra dry. I think this log is about as straight and non-twisty as I will ever find, but no matter how good or non-twisty this hickory may be, once I split all this up into final stave sizes, I'm concerned that the rapid drying that it will go through will cause it to warp and twist like crazy. I don't have the time, energy, space, or tools to take each of these staves down to rough bow shape and clamp flat to dry...which would be ideal. Any suggestion on what to do to minimize any warping or twisting from the rapid drying environment? Maybe just split into Quarters for now or 1/6 for now and let those fatter staves dry more slowly hoping that and the bulk of each will minimize warping? OK...I think I just worked my way into an answer on that...I need to split into staves with three or four bows in them that will dry reasonably vs splitting it into final bow size staves.
Thanks for reading through all that and thanks in advance for any advice given or to be given. I'll kick y'all down a hickory stave once they are ready since you...or if you helped guide me to not screwing this log up!
Y'all have a happy and safe Independence Day!