Primitive Archer

Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: Jax666 on March 06, 2015, 08:37:43 am

Title: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Jax666 on March 06, 2015, 08:37:43 am
I have a wild cherry that needs cut. I thought it was a chock cherry, but may be wild black cherry.Is it worth splitting for a couple of starves?
Jerry
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: PEARL DRUMS on March 06, 2015, 08:41:37 am
My opinion is a strong no. 
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Eric Krewson on March 06, 2015, 08:49:19 am
The late Jimmy Taylor made thousands of hickory backed cherry bows. If you want to go this route you could use the cherry.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Dances with squirrels on March 06, 2015, 09:36:09 am
I've used wild/black cherry plenty... never successfully for long in a selfbow, but made some lively bows backed with very thin quartersawn hickory. Now I mostly just save it for under clear glass... an underrated wood in glass bows, imo.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Buckeye Guy on March 06, 2015, 09:47:03 am
Chery is very unpredictable
It loves to break your heart
but if you are going to burn it any way give it a try some times it works
or you can back it with something else and do well enough
Have fun

Pearly is just gun shy  or he would not be so quick to say no  >:D :laugh:
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: missilemaster on March 06, 2015, 09:49:55 am
The only thing I would do bow-wise with it is saw it into laminations as the core of tri-lams, sandwiched in between good stuff! Glass guys use it for core wood.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Roy on March 06, 2015, 10:02:11 am
I've used it as core lams between osage and boo. Pearly can't even make an ERC bow:)
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: SLIMBOB on March 06, 2015, 10:13:06 am
Heart breaker wood. Every bow I tried with it failed in some manner, usually late in the game. Seen some dandys so it can be done, but not a beginner wood at all. Unpredictable....well, in many ways that's true, but you can make book on it exploding at some point. Fickle. Pretty. Lots of far better choices. I will try another at some point I'm sure, but that's just out of spite for the stuff.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Stoker on March 06, 2015, 10:49:08 am
It is a heart breaker.. Chokecherry is all I got in my bow wood desert.. Save all your shavings.. Good smokewood for wild game sausage.. Nothing lost ifin you give it a try..
Thanks Leroy
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Dances with squirrels on March 06, 2015, 11:04:00 am
It IS goog for honing of our skills.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: SLIMBOB on March 06, 2015, 11:20:18 am
Yes, but the key there is the word "honing" which indicates an existing skill that can be sharpened. For the less experienced I think getting a handful of bows finished and shooting is more valuable than a bunch of broken attempts from a wood that was destined for the bone pile.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: crooketarrow on March 06, 2015, 11:23:42 am
  You can make a bow as long as it's little wide and little long. Good practice but why practice on a inferer wood. 

If your cutting it any ways it's up to you if you'd like to try it. Take the bark off and seal the whole stave. Cherrys really excepable to wood borers. Or really sray it down with a pestaside. Personally I'd take them down to the back seal the whole stave. When your ready to start no matter how many years the staves slowly drying. Most woods won't rot it it's sealed air tight.

 I'd go back every year and reseal it to keep it air tight if needed.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: PaulN/KS on March 06, 2015, 03:08:03 pm
With or without sapwood for the back of the bow?
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Markus on March 06, 2015, 04:24:27 pm
Prunus avium- Wild Cherry makes good bows, that is the one growing here in Scandinavia. Don't know if it is the same you got over there across the pond.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: PEARL DRUMS on March 06, 2015, 05:48:59 pm
Ours here is very brittle and doesn't care to bend or compress on its own, generally the first tree strong winds take out. It makes great laminations in glass bows or tri-lam wood bows. Its very light weight, and fast as a result.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: wapiti1997 on March 06, 2015, 05:56:20 pm
P. serotina is the wild or black cherry most commonly referred to in the eastern US
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Springbuck on March 06, 2015, 06:04:12 pm
  This is funny to me.  I live in the west so it might be different, but the biggest trouble chokecherry or any wild cherry has given me is that chokecherry  likes to twist.  Otherwise it has treateds me great, especially for kids' bows.    Black cherry, actually domestic black cherry or domestic gone feral?  Not so good.  Really soft.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: DC on March 06, 2015, 09:52:19 pm
We have Bitter Cherry (Prunus emarginata) here on the West Coast. Do any of the PNW'ers know if it makes bows? Notice I didn't say good bows. I have a couple of pieces seasoning. They were clearing the lot next door and I got the faller to toss a piece over the fence. Probably the easiest wood I've gotten.
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: Jax666 on March 07, 2015, 07:59:23 am
As little as my back likes to use a sledge hammer I am thinking whittling and fire wood. I have whittled walking sticks and spoons from piece before and yes the bug love it. They go after the piece in the wood pile. If I am just going to fire wood I can use my brother-in-law's hydrological splitter.
 
Title: Re: Wild cherry wood
Post by: PaulN/KS on March 08, 2015, 12:13:24 pm
I do recall that cherry does get a mention in one of the Bowyer's bible books. Still wondering if leaving sapwood as the back is a way to go..? ???