Let me ash you a question

Started by Bvas, August 25, 2018, 06:20:41 PM

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Bvas

The emerald ash borers have moved thru our area the past couple years wiping out our ash trees.

How long are these trees still viable as bow wood if they remain standing?

Also, is there a certain ash species that is better? Risers? Core wood?
Some hunt to survive; some survive to hunt

Roy from Pa

Long as they are free of holes, they are good.

Lams...

Cores...

Dry ash is the best:)

Forwardhandle

I have a white ash stave that's been in my rafters a few years I was told by trusted self bowyers that white ash was about the best of the spicies but I have never used ash for any thing yet.
If you fear failure, you will never try ! But never except it!!

Pat B

I wouldn't use any dead standing whitewood for self or even backed bows. Fungi is pretty good at it's job of deteriorating dead wood.
It may be OK under glass or in a riser or maybe knife handle scales.
Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!
TGMM Family of the Bow

Mad Max

I would rather fail at something above my means, than to succeed at something  beneath my means  
}}}}===============>>

onemississipp

Black ash is the worst of the ash...
Here are the specific gravity of the ashes, the higher the better..

ASH: green .56; Oregon .56; blue .58; white .59; European .61. White is our heaviest ash. Almost all sapwood. Oregon looks and behaves almost identically to White.

There is also a list on my outdated site

https://sites.google.com/site/onemississipp/bowwoods



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Dustin
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fujimo

nice site- lots of great info there :thumbsup:

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