Thanks for the compliments everyone.
TurtleCreek, Ash grain really pops with any stain. It's that good old ring-porous wood.
coaster, thanks I am heading out for a overnight bear hunt tomorrow morning, was hoping to use this bow, but I am opting for that howard hill pictured. Hope to bring back some meat, but mainly this is a scouting trip to a section of the woods I have never been. Those kids always look hungry..doesn't matter how many cans of chili or peanut butter honey sandwiches they have scarfed down!

Arrowind, thanks it could have been made around the campfire just as easily. I was going fro that kind of a bow. It got me thinking of trying to go on a hunt with no bow at all, and see what I could whip up in camp. but obviously, as I am reaching for the fiberglass bow for tomorrow's hunt, I am a ways off from that.
Thanks Dave, it does fling em. I had fun shooting a mixed spine bag of arrows and seeing them group by spine. Surprisingly it likes a heavier spine arrow. Must be closer to center shot than I can judge with my eye.
Steelslinger, I am glad you caught this post. I have one more stave from this log. A third sister. I will get that one posted up at some point. How is your sinew-backed ash shooting?
lesken, BBQ that would be a funny theme bow. I did not use charcoal briquets, but I am sure that would work, probably easier than what I did. I took hard-wood charcoal chunks out of the fireplace and ground them up with a mortar and pestle. Probably the most work that went into this bow.
Del, thanks! It felt good to take one from start to finish in a day. I feel like so many of my bows are tied up in various states of almost done. This one felt good.