Bow Building for Beginners - Build Your First Primitive Bow
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- Опубликовано: 2 май 2024
- A perfect first guide for first time bow makers. Ryan walks through the process giving detailed, yet quick and concise information directed towards beginner bow builders.
The books can be ordered individually or as the whole set on our website. Think link will take you directly to the Bow Making Book. This book will shave years off your bow building journey. Please consider the full set. There is so much incredible information in the full Secrets & Science Collection. gillsprimitivearchery.com/pro...
Videos of interest mentioned are as follows.
The full stone age bow build which discusses the force drying section.
• Full Stone Age Bow Bui...
The Hunting for Bow Staves video • Hunting for the Best B...
The more advanced Osage bow build. • How to Build an Osage ...
Building Bow Strings • How to Build your own ... Развлечения
This is probably the most informative bow building video on RUclips.
Thank you, sir.
You taught me to build a bow when I was just 13 years old. It might have been mystery wood , low poundage, and later broke. But that’s was the funnest bow I ever had.
I seen the bow you made
I seen the bow you made
Ryan Gill is the best. Idk where I’d be without him in my primitive journey. He’s got me making my own bows, knapping my own points and shooting my own arrows. My only wishes from him are more videos and a hog hunt with him sometime. I really appreciate everything
Thank you for putting this video out there for free!
Thanks Ryan, I really enjoy all of your videos, made my first "hand carved maple" bow at about 10 yrs. of age.I violated front and back growth rings ( green wood) and it broke at a hinge on the first draw, but it sure was the most fun. Learned a lot since then and still learning at 73 years. Thank you again.
Perfect, very thorough!
This is definitely everything a beginner needs to know.
Great job, Ryan!!
GREAT video dude!, I'm just finishing my first bow, I started a couple months ago taking my time and learning as I go. Watched a bunch of Clay Hayes videos and 1 Ed Scott video, not taking anything away from those guys they're great bowyers but man I wish I'd have seen this video first, great stuff lots of information
Awesome! Thank you!
Amazing Video ! Thank you for teaching us.
Good job, Ryan , I watched with one of the young men I work with, and he was enthralled with the part we got to see. he’s very excited to make his own bow now. He realizes it’s not just me that makes bows, but somebody famous on the Internet too.😂👍👍🏹🏹🏹 keep up the good work!
best bow instruction video I've ever seen.
Bravo Ryan! Superb😊
Good stuff. Always enjoy watching!
Glad to be a subscriber, this is by far one of the best channels on yt. It gives more knowledge than ten or twenty other channels I could name combined.
Thank you! Very inspirational. Thank you for taking the time and effort explaining all the details.
Amazing video. Really summarizes the book and serves as a great companion to it.
great teaching!
awesome stuff
Very interesting and very good tutorial. Bow making is a very craftsman-specific art. Yours is perfectly fine, but people should understand that bow making is a DO IT BY YOURSELF craftsmanship and that they would learn and improve by actually MAKING MANY BOWS. Recommending or discouraging the use of some tools (vice, rasp, hatchet, draw knives. motor tools) is totally craftsman-dependent. I have seen perfectly functional and beautiful bows made with just a parang machete or a hatchet, or with the help of band saws and other motor tools. Go make some bows by yourself, blow some away by making silly mistakes, and LEARN BY DOING, not by watching this or that RUclipsrs. Thanks for sharing!
I have a question for the community about their thoughts on found arrowheads:
leave them where you found them?
Turn them into a tribal elder or cultural center?
Use it to hunt with respect to the craftsman who created it?
Many thanks!
Very knowledgeable vedio👌
Thanks Excellent Video to make Bow🎉🙏👏
Great video! I've got a tree out back in mind too.
...you`d have made a GREAT teacher...😀
He is a great teacher.
Just for future reference, the sap tube is called pith. Great video. 🙃
My first hikory bow , I cut in spring. Varced it into a beutiful shape , it was not completely dry , I started tilling it to soon . I believe i ruined it .
I will star another one soon . And I will let it dry a year ,
Was a set back .
We only have Bitternut Hickory around here, and it grows in a spiral. The Hophornbeam also grows with a twist. The Bitternut Hickory also splits like american elm. 😝
I imagine the worst part of being a beginner at this, is the constant anxiety of fucking the entire thing at any moment lol
I have a functional bamboo traditional bow my parents gave to me when I was like 10, because I´m a die hard LOTR fan, but I´ve been thinking about building my own one, looks complicated as hell, but lets give it a try.
I live in Washington state and the only wood that I can get kinda easy is cherry wood (very marginal at best made a very low poundage and doesn't cast very well) i have a bunch of big leaf maple on the property but have heard bad things it. So I've been making them from lumber ie. Home Depot 😮💨
I have acres of hickory and a few oak and and some Osage orange. Of these 3 trees what do you think would be the best?
The tiller of My recent short bow came out kind of iffy. Good time to go through the basics.
i have a question for you.
i have an indian type(montoc) flat bow made of hickory.
it is 30# at 28".
is it possible to shorten the bow ?
( i want it to be more like a comanche bow)
i would like to reduce the length by about 2-3" from each limb.
is that possible ?
if i do that, will it increase the pull weight ?
and reduce the draw length ?
I have a Hickory stave about half again as large as the one you are showing and about a foot longer. I also have a dogwood stave about the same size. The idea was a Hickory bow and a butt load of dogwood arrows. Thing is, that was about 15 years ago when I stashed them away in my basement.. I just found them again and they are like STONE ! So my question is, can wood be too dried and hard for a bow?
I have a question for the community about their thoughts on found arrowheads:
leave them where you found them?
Turn them into a tribal elder or cultural center?
Use it to hunt with respect to the craftsman who created it?
Many thanks!
Leave them, most tribal communities will say the same. I know for my tribe we were told by the elders to leave them and not bother them.
Question we had to have al the ash removed, and there is a huge tree laying on the ground it's been there for a year ,if I use a chainsaw to cut it lengthwise in order to get it manageable to split will it work after laying that long or just stick with a hickory stave I have, this ash would have at least 20 bows in it it's just to big to split without sawing it, maybe laying on the ground rui ed it, there is another piece 20 inches in diameter they threw on a brush pile, hast touched the ground if I can drag it out with my truck, it's 15 ft long 20 inches diameter, just wondering?
Strip the bark, there's a decent chance the beetles and wood wasps have gotten to them already or if you get moderate rainfall there might be fungus underneath the bark. Best bet is to use something newer.
Also checkout a Japanese wood rasp.
I've heard natives preferred to use fire killed or lightning struck. Any thoughts?
Any Indian woods suggestions please?
19:57 How do i get my stave into that rectangular shape so i can draw on it?
With the same woodworking tools you will use to carve it out. Just done by eye.
Where do you sell your books? I couldn't find them on Amazon.
That are available at www.huntprimitive.com
Watched your advance build while back.like this one too.want to build one now. Was raised with a recurve. Wasnt much o a hunter then.🦬🐎