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Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: Titanbow_SC on July 18, 2006, 11:35:00 PM
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About where in Kansas could a person find osage growing? I recently moved to Colorado, and I figured I'm 6 hours or so from osage country. I am looking for a place to maybe harvest some staves.
Thanks,
Titan
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There are plenty around Fort Riley, Ks
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Check just about any farm and you will find it. I know is in the Eastern part of the state all over the place.
Bill
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Titan, I'm in the eastern part of the state. Here it is also called hedge ,I have about 400 acres of owned and rented land and it is an on going battle to keep it down.If you want to cut some your always welcome. If you tell me what size, and how you'd like handled I;ll be happy to send you what you need if you pay shipping. I have a nieghbor with a kiln that will dry it if wanted. Ben
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Ben; Do you hace access to a large saw (band saw) for cutting osage boards?? Ray - Lenexa.
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Ray, Yea,I have a nieghbor with a full work shop. I'm only about 35 miles south of you. Send me a pm and I'll give you my phone number. We'll set a time and you can come down, grab a chain saw and you can pick your new bow stock. Ben
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Ben, I'm in Lenexa too. Brand new to the site and brand new to the idea of an osage selfbow. Let me know if you need any more of those pesky thorn trees removed.
Ray, I'm in old town. Nice to know there's another in Lenexa. Tom
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Tom, Your welcome to come also, same as Ray just pm or e-mail me and we'll go cut. Ben
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I always think about you bowyers whenever I drive by a huge mangled pile of recently bulldozed hedge(Osage). What a waste.
Brian
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Lenexa also, and hedge (osage)is everywhere!!
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Mel you get that osage finished before leaving Mojam?
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Titan, I've lived in every quartered corner of the state except the SE since I entered the world 38 years ago and I can tell you I've seen it everywhere here. Even on my visits to SE KS woods, I've seen it there. In western KS, where I actually grew up, it was commonly planted in windbreaks to block the snow and to use as fence posts. You might find them along creeks and streams out that way, but more often in the windbreaks. Up here where I live now, you can find it in almost any wooded area. I noticed that Wildlife and Parks spend a considerable amount of money clearing a batch of it last year from a section of land up on Perry lake. You might give them a call and see if they have any projects close to your side of the state and if you couldn't help yourself. The regional office is in Pratt, KS: (620) 672-5911
These folks might be able to help ya too: http://www.kansasforests.org/community/program.shtml
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Mickey, still have a little scraping before the long string, but getting close.
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If you can't find hedge in Kansas You ain't got your eyes open. LOL. If
If You can't find hedge in Kansas You don't have Your eyes open. LOL .If Ben can't fill Your order holler. If it didn't make such good fence post it would be on the noxius weed list.bretto
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Cool..did you narrow it some?
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Yes - as if I know what I am doing. I just hope it does not snap and bean me in the forehead the first time I draw it. :knothead:
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osage is tuff stuff and yours looked real clean. You'll be fine although I'd wear your motorcycle helmet the first time just in case :biglaugh:
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Titan, check with your local utility company. Someone from their tree department will know where a hedge row is located. I'm pretty sure I seen some around Canon City and Pueblo.
Irish, I made a tiller tree tonight. Come on by. I've about got a MOJAM bow ready to shoot.
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You can recognize Osage Orange by the large grapefruit size green apples on them in the early fall; or laying underneath them. The Indians that used Osage generally rubbed them with a piece of leather to warm them up before stringing them in cold weather. This was impressed on me by Mr. LeRoy Young of Neet Archery. He strung up an Osage longbow he had made many years before so I could shoot it. Wish you luck.
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I'm going home this weekend to cut some down for staves and lams. Can't wait to get his stuff on the ground and drying process started.
Josh