Well, the long time bow makers have to remember that they have many bows in reserve.
Newcomers do not.
A chrysalled bow can be fixed and can last for awhile. It will not last "forever". It will eventually fold on itself like closing a book. . Don't ask me how I know that. LOL.
There are 2 causes for chrysalls.
First, if the design is stressed (too short, too narrow, too much weight) the bow could develop them. In this case they will be spread out over one or both limnbs and likely all along the limbs.
Second, the chyrsalls are localized and form in certain areas because the limb bends too much there. The fault is bad tillering. To fix, leave the chrysalled are a alone and retiller above and below to fix the tiller. Retiller the other limb to match. For insurance add a rawhide patch to buttress the area.
Jawge