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first bow memories?

Started by cohutta orange, May 09, 2010, 03:35:00 AM

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cohutta orange

When I was young my step grandpaw took me in one day and said I was going to learn how to make a bow. Wow it changed my life. It was  a little hickory sapling easy to do and we strung it with weed eater string. I was Robin Hood though. Since then Ive been building bows for me  and my friends and loving every minute of it. Just easy self bows , but I wanna do something nice soon. How did everyone else get into building bows?
Shoot straight and keep the heads keen

walkabout

i grew up shooting an old recurve my grandpa had, and my brother and i always built slefbows from variuos woods when we were younger, although we never had any great succeses. when i moved here i had access to a shop and machines/tools so i decided to look into building and found sam harpers site. from there i lurked here finding info and other stuff until i joined when i made my first successful bow and then i joined.
Richard

Magnum in Ms

When I was a kid my grandpa also show me how to build a kids bow from a sapling. Mostly used hedge or hickory. Cut the string grooves with a pocket knife and string it with cotton string that wouldn't stretch too much.(no such thing as a weed eater then). Then we would cut some cane for arrows. Cut a nock groove to a joint on one end and just past a joint on the other so we could butt a nail head against the joint and tie it in place for a point.
 Lots of fun for a kid. We didn't have any video games, thank goodness.
Every one is ignorant its just on different subjects

Andrew Wesley

my parents wouldn't let me have a bow when i was a kid. "bows are outdated, only good for wounding animals" my dad would say.
when i was a teen working at a Sportsman Show i met some guys from the TBW and they invited me to a Bow building session and i made my first bow... 46lb draw vine maple. since then I've made 10 self bows from different maples, pacific yew, ocean spray, and others, and will build many more.
(if i can find wood to use around my new place in Germany)
~Andrew Wesley

cohutta orange

He made sure I learned how to cut nocks at a young age. I've built a few bows since then but it is something I will never forget. For that I am absoutely grateful thanks pawpaw. Just wondering if anyone started like I did. spell check is giving me crap on the word pawpaw but that is how it is so who cares thanks paw
Shoot straight and keep the heads keen

b.glass

I've always been interested in Indian culture. When I was a kid I only had western movies that I remembered. I always cheered for the Indian. I remember deciding that I wanted a bow and bugged Mom until she took me to town to get one. I don't know what happened to that bow.

When I was pregnant for my third child, I dug up some sod for a flowerbed. I found my first arrowhead. I got some library books and studied it. Turns out there is a technique and I have found several since. But I picked up a copy of "Bows and Arrows of the Native Americans" by Jim Hamm at a pow-wow. It was so informative and entertaining I was compelled to make a bow.

It was horrible. But I was smitten. My skills have improved, (it couldn't hardly get worse), but I don't feel at all accomplished. After 13 years of off and on bow making, I still enjoy it.
B.Glass, aka Mom, aka Longbowwoman
Gregory R. Glass Feb. 14th, 1989-April 1st, 2007; Forever 18.
TGMM Family of The Bow
Mark 5:36 "Don't be afraid, just believe".

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