Timber ID help please

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

stuckinthemud

Established Member
Joined
17 Jun 2019
Messages
766
Reaction score
484
Location
Caerphilly
This one is a bit different. This is a crossbow, its 600 years old and was pulled from a castle moat near Malmo in Sweden. Everything in me is screaming yew. Having been buried in mud, using colour as an ID tool might not be appropriate but the grain, knots and bark all look right for yew to me. I would be very grateful for your thoughts, especially if you think I'm wrong!
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1524.jpeg
    IMG_1524.jpeg
    3.5 MB
  • IMG_1525.jpeg
    IMG_1525.jpeg
    3.6 MB
  • IMG_1526.jpeg
    IMG_1526.jpeg
    4 MB
  • IMG_1527.jpeg
    IMG_1527.jpeg
    4 MB
  • IMG_1528.jpeg
    IMG_1528.jpeg
    3.7 MB
  • IMG_1529.jpeg
    IMG_1529.jpeg
    3.5 MB
  • IMG_1530.jpeg
    IMG_1530.jpeg
    3.6 MB
Yes yew was the bow wood of choice. I have made a couple of longbows from it. The best yew for bows came from the mountains of Spain and Italy. Something about the slower growing being better. I daresay Nordic yew would be similar. I used yew from Oregon USA (yew is as rare as rocking horse poo in Australia) and while the bow I kept shot beautifully for a few years one day at the range it just went bang and became a dozen splinters. You feel a bit of a fool standing there with a string in your hand and 2 small bits of wood hanging in the breeze.
Regards
John
 
The last yew bow I made went “bang” just as I was nearly done tillering. Heartwood and sapwood separated, bow blew up into 3 pieces. Most likely a fungus moving through one or two rings
 
The last yew bow I made went “bang” just as I was nearly done tillering. Heartwood and sapwood separated, bow blew up into 3 pieces. Most likely a fungus moving through one or two rings
Yes making self bows has quite a failure rate. If any woodworkers are looking for a challenge there it is. Take a bit of wood to the brink of destruction without crossing the line. Great feeling when it works out.
Regards
John
 
Back
Top