Hey all. I live in NJ, and since I have made a bow or two, I've kept my eye out for local bow woods (i.e. I see an osage every once and a while, and lots of black locust). So apparently, at some point in the past, yew was a popular landscaping choice in my area. My guess is "taxus densiformis" based on looking at landscaping sites. I see them everywhere, and they always look like you, but are always a dense, round bush, rarely higher than chest.
Well imagine my surprise when I see, around the corner from my house, this beast:
http://i.imgur.com/qirUDJE.jpgI am not a botanist, so not really sure what species of yew it is. All i can tell you is:
-it is undoubtedly yew
-its huge - 40 feet?
-it has quite a few straight sections at least 8-10 inches in diameter.
-there is a place where a branch was cut, and it definitely has the heartwood/sapwood look, with a pretty tight ring count
Now I don't have designs on this specific tree (unless it gets struck by lightning), but I was surprised to find such a large one in an area I expected none. Here are my questions:
-would this be an untended densiformis, or is there a chance it is another species?
-has anyone made a bow out of densiformis?