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Mmmmm...Osage

Started by John Scifres, May 02, 2013, 08:00:00 AM

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John Scifres

From a recent trip to Illinois with Darren "Hackbow" Shue.

We cut the two little ones first because they were down in a hole but no pics of those as they were only 8-10"ers.  Nice straight wood though.

Here's the prize and...bonus...it was only 50 yards from the truck!

 

 

Now we gotta split the beast.

 

Nice rings.
 

Our haul, about 35 bows worth.

 
Take a kid hunting!

TGMM Family of the Bow

Drew

wow nice haul! Wish we had more in MI!
Just a Coyote Soul out wandering...

bowhntineverythingnh03743

Wow I wish that golden wood grew where I was. That is amazing find and what great rings she has

snakewood3

Great looking Osage !
U.S. Navy Seabees '79 - '86
Custom knives and leatherwork

ron w

What nice rings.......lucky you!!
In the beginner's mind there are many possibilities. In the expert's there are few...So the most difficult thing is always to keep your beginner's mind...This is also the real secret of the arts: always be a beginner.  Shunryu Suzuki

TimBoA

Nice!  I have my eye on a big Osage tree and just need to find the time to get to it...I hope the rings look as good as these!

talkingcabbage

Ha! That's exactly how I feel after splitting osage!    :biglaugh:
Actually, I think that's what finally convinced me to try glass bows. That osage is just too much work sometimes!
Joe

"If your work speaks for itself, don't interrupt."

One of two things will happen; it'll either work or it won't.

Roy from Pa

Very nice haul, John. Heck Darren could have carried that log out whole as big as he is...

John Scifres

Yes Roy, he could have in his younger days  :)   He's pushin' 50 years old ya know.  He about puked carrying a couple of the little quarters out of the hole.  I thought I might have to drag him out.  Course I would have quartered him first.  I was kind enough to let him prove his manliness by only carrying one quarter at a time myself.  'Cause that's just the kind of guy I am  :)
Take a kid hunting!

TGMM Family of the Bow

soy


Dan Landis

John, great find and good rings, can't beat that! How are you splitting your logs?  The osage that I have split I think have split very easily, but have only worked a few logs.  Maybe I've just been lucky.

BCWV

That's beautiful John! I would love to split on osage till I pass out just once. So far, I've just got lightheaded on hickory and black locust.

John Scifres

"How are you splitting your logs?"

Hmm, I think I remember someone saying, maybe Jim Hamm, beat on it 'til you pass out, wake up and then beat on it some more  :)

Here's how it's done:  http://sticknstring.webs.com/wood2009.htm

It's simple but never easy.
Take a kid hunting!

TGMM Family of the Bow

Roy from Pa

I hear ya, John. Darren is pretty much a big whimp.. I thumped him arm wrestling more than  once..

rainman

Hey you guys leave Darren alone, he can't help if he is from Illinois.
Semper Fidelis
Dan Raney

Osagetree

Knew I should not have looked... Now I am ashamed of myself.
>>--TGMM--> Family of the Bow

Bob at Work

John,
great haul...are you bringing any of that to MoJam...?
Bob

John Scifres

Hey Bob,

I won't be at MOJam again.  I have to travel a lot in July for work plus I am taking a week's vacation with the family over the 4th  :(
Take a kid hunting!

TGMM Family of the Bow

Bob at Work

Hate to hear it John...I've missed the past 2 and thought #15 would be a good one for a reunion...Sal and John are coming for sure...we could all shoot the 3D at night again...  :)
Great osage find!
Bob

Dan Landis

John, been away for a few days.  I always start by following an existing crack that crosses the center of the log.  I open this up with an ax pounded in with a sledge, then start wedges in the side of the log and keep working them till it falls in half.  Sometimes will have to use a hatchet to cut through the stringy pieces that don't want to let go.  Once in half I decide how many splits will give me the best staves to miss knots and other problem areas.  I start the ax in the end again and follow the steps described to get it in half.  The laggest tree so far has been 15" at the stump end, most are smaller 6-8" stuff.  Maybe I've just been lucky with the few that I have done so far, but I didn't think it was very hard to split.

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