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11
Bows / Re: Tillering advice: This thing is kinkier than...
« Last post by JW_Halverson on Today at 10:44:15 am »
Those skins really made that bow POP! But as much as I love the look, I really have a fondness for the species, so I don't molest them. I have to settle for roadkills or trades.

Thanks, guys.  When crooked wood's what you have, crooked wood is what you use!  If I ever get hold of a straight piece I'm not going to know what to do with myself.   ;D

That reminds me of someone that long ago stopped posting here, George Stoneberg from down Texas way. That fool spent more time and effort on staves that wouldn't even BURN STRAIGHT and turned out some crazy character bows in the doing. As I got to know him I found out why he was always working with bottom of the barrel staves....he was giving away all the good stuff! Good ol' George, big hearted feller.
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Cooking Forum / Re: Sourdough
« Last post by JW_Halverson on Today at 10:34:49 am »
I fooled around with sourdough a few times. My first was a starter I collected just by sitting flour water and sugar out on the back deck on a windy day. After all, natural yeasts are EVERYWHERE.

I recently ran across a guy that makes blended videos of woodworking and cooking. The first video I saw was him simmering wood chips in cream and sugar, then making a wood flavor infused ice cream. He then turns a bowl from the same wood and carves a matching spoon to eat the ice cream. I followed his videos and ran across one where he made a sourdough starter from juniper berries he had collected. Juniper berries have a dusty bloom on them that is pure yeast.  I did a little research and found that the ground hugging juniper in the Black Hills is indeed Juniperus communalis, the same juniper that grows the berries used in cooking and making gin! I picked a mess of berries last fall on a ruffed grouse hunt and I intend to crush them and use them as the base of a new sourdough starter soon. 

I don't tend to stick with sourdough starters long because they are a lot of work and I discard a lot of starter for what little baking I do. Still, It's fun to brew up a batch of bread from the wilds now and then.
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Bows / Re: December 2025 BOM voting
« Last post by Pappy on Today at 09:55:31 am »
Beautiful bunch of bows, nice work guys. :)
 Pappy
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Bows / Re: Casuarina
« Last post by Hamish on Today at 08:33:24 am »
Casurina, Australian timber. Looks like a pine because it has needle like leaves, but the wood is more like a diffuse porous oak. It is also called  she oak. Splits cleanly like oak.

Never tried it for a bow, but Badger one of the most experienced bowyers on here rates it as pretty good from memory.




General theory for bending wood with heat, is if the wood is green, use wet heat, like steaming or boiling.  Also use wet heat for tight bends like recurves. If the wood is dry, use a heat gun, for taking out propellor twist, or reflexing, or making the limbs look more even.
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Bows / Re: Casuarina
« Last post by bjrogg on Today at 08:09:42 am »
I also would like to welcome you to Primitive Archery site.

I wish I could help you , but I haven’t heard of that wood either. Hopefully someone else has.

Bjrogg
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Bows / Re: What shall I do with this tiny yew stave?
« Last post by jameswoodmot on Today at 06:16:47 am »
Fantastic Dave thats a great thread for me to read through, just got to page four this morning. I find the search function only really brings me stuff up from the mid 2000's so i woud have missed that if you hadnt linked it.

Yeah I did consider a tiny ELB Derek but then I remebered I hate them  ;D Nice, looking at Dave's bow i think the lower limb will be ok in width but the upper will get a whisp of sapwood on the edges. The question i was wondering was will the added weight of the sapwood negate the added performance of the increased width by leaving it on. (i've written that a few times now, still not sure thats the most coherent sentance) but if you say it just takes a bit of heart wood on the belly, it should end up 70-80% heartwood so should be just fine!
17
Bows / Re: An experimental leaf-spring lever bow
« Last post by NicAzana on Today at 05:57:59 am »
Very cool.  Looks great.  I did one kinda like this but I called it a platypus bow.  It was a while ago when I posted it here.  It was similar idea but incorporated into a 5 piece bamboo asiatic  style bow.  I’ll try a post a pic or two here if I can find it.  Better yet here’s the link from my post on pa

http://www.primitivearcher.com/smf/index.php/topic,72317.msg1014215.html#msg1014215

Thats very interesting! Any reason you didn't choose to make it a BITH bow?

That’s a cool bow! Well designed, thought out and executed! I couldn’t see what wood you used?

It's wych elm.

That is pretty cool! I have always wondered how these would work out. Not bad at all!

I was a little surprised that it worked out so well. I think this design would allow some pretty extreme stuff. I have a bow drawn out in the VirtualBow program that is an extreme r/d bend in the handle bow:



It has very low stress (90 MPa) at 40 lbs of draw weight and VirtualBow predicts a speed of ~200 fps with 10gpp. Friction will probably eat some of that, but still - there's probably room to stress it a little more.
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Bows / Re: What shall I do with this tiny yew stave?
« Last post by Del the cat on Today at 05:28:30 am »
That looks to be thick enough.
My fave style is a willow leaf shaped limb narrow grip.
You may need to de-crown it if the sapwood is thick, but you can maintain maximum with by allowing the sapwood to wrap around onto the belly, so the belly has a strip of heartwood along the centre and sapwood either side of that, it looks really cool. It doesn't need much heartwood to give it some poke. You could go for an ELB style but that would be more stress on a short bow.
Alternatively you could splice on some short levers onto each end (maybe 3" of lever plus 2" of V splice) that would give you some extra length and look cool  ;D
Del
https://bowyersdiary.blogspot.com/2014/08/monkey-bow-lives-again.html
https://bowyersdiary.blogspot.com/2014/08/monkey-bow-lever-detail.html

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Cooking Forum / Sourdough
« Last post by sleek on Today at 01:38:01 am »
My wife and I have been on an absolute sourdough kick for at least a month now. She is grain sensitive and we discovered that home made sourdough is something she can tolerate pretty well. If any of yall have any recipes that involves sourdough im all ears!
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Bows / Re: December 2025 BOM voting
« Last post by CCopland on Today at 01:03:44 am »
FWIW....I look at the selections and try to decide which bow out of the lot presented I would like to own the most!

Cheers,
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