Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Bows => Topic started by: paulc on May 19, 2020, 10:19:04 am
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I am guessing some kind of birch..?
Thanks in advance! Paul
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River birch(Betula nigra)
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Thanks!
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If the grain behaves I ought to get 5 staves out of it....there does seem to be a bit of twist in the grain but since I am new to this side of things I really don't know what I am talking about.
Thanks city of Savannah for the free wood!
Paul
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I believe river birch is only marginal bow wood so design your bows accordingly.
Savannah is my hometown. :OK
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I figure I have 6 months to find a design that will work.
Wife and I are in the process of moving from Tybee into town...3 evacuations/2 floods in 4 yrs is too much for us out here on the island. Work provides a house on slab as part of job-no longer worth it :-) By end of month I will be commuting like so many other folks but it is a beautiful ride out onto the island.
Paul
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I made a river birch. 2” wide and 72” long with a straight limb profile to a 10” taper to the tips. Turned out good. Mine was arrow straight trunk wood using the ring right under the bark.
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Paul, a lot more traffic there since I left in 1978. We lived in Bluffton for 12 years after that so went to Savannah regularly. We moved up here to Brevard in 1990. Been back a few times. Always love seeing Savannah but not the traffic or heat and humidity. I spent most of my summers at friends house at the N E corner of 12th Street and Butler Ave on Tybee, my surf bum days. 8)
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We saw 4th of July level traffic this past weekend...traffic was backed up from Lazaretto creek bridge almost all the way to where islands expressway heads right/north towards Savannah(7 miles maybe?)....lots of scared residents out here with covid running around and crowds like that...40% of tybee pop is high risk older adults.....and it wasn't a holiday weekend. Cover your cough y'all! :-)
fwiw, Paul
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birch here does not follow the grain well when split. a split will run off near a knot and keep going and not back around. not so much a sign of twisted grain, as most birch bows are usually made from sawn staves.