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Main Boards => The Bowyer's Bench => Topic started by: Birddogswosu on February 13, 2016, 06:40:00 PM
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Hello,
I am new to arrow making and I am looking for good wood that is available to me in western Oklahoma. I have orange Osage, red oak, curly maple, and macadamia nut woods in my pile. I understand red oak is a good but heavy material. What are the qualities of they other woods that I have? I am most curious about using orange Osage because I have several pieces that would be good candidates, for arrows. Being straight grained and about the right length.
:knothead:
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Best arrows I have ever made were from home depot bamboo, they seem to last bettwr than my cheap carbon arrows. There is an awesome build along out there on the googlenet you can find pretty easy that has a step by step for the whole deal.
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Osage wont work. Got any hickory or pecan down there? Maple? Poplar?
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Pecan I have that growing. Does it make a good arrow?
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Pecan is a hickory.
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I think osage would be too brittle to make good shafting. It is also very heavy. There are lots of other woods that would make good shafting.
Poplar is very strong and makes great arrows. Its only drawback, IMO, is it is a little light in physical weight.
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This is a great video on making bamboo arrows even if it is not in English. https://www.youtube.com/Watch?v=vyejbipavWw. Handmade traditional Japanese arrows.
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I have river cane from Oklahoma, sent to me from a gentleman I made strings for back in '94.
Great arrow source! Wish they grew here!
Osage, great for bows and footing arrow shafts.
Cane would be a lot less work in my opinion.