it is a great feeling. can't wait till spring trout now that ya mention it!
osage is a great bow wood, but it can be touch and go on what is a bow quality piece. if you want to make one in the future, grab a buddy that knows, and go cut one down now. gonna be a little while before its ready. or read traditional bowyers bible series. great info/ primitive archer forums.
i stick with hickory and Ipe for my builds. lots of times i make the handles out of mahogany since i have a bunch sitting round here from building a deck. Ipe is very very very fast for me, and the bows end up being much slighter and graceful. i like them bamboo backed for strength. my hickory bows are generally also backed, but the pile of staves drying right now are debarked awaiting self bows.
this one was ipe and bamboo, and shot really well in the dry desert environment. we used to take them into the showers at night to try to keep them from drying too much while we were building them! the guys at prim archer forum really helped us out over there, and donated a ton of stuff as well. good people
http://www.primitivearcher.com/mm5...02&Product_Code=B-CA-17.3&Category_Code=BICAN
I like them 60-65 lbs or a touch heavier, but my father can no longer pull the first one i made for him. we dropped it down to 45 lbs at my draw, 52 at his draw. i took a deer with it this year as he urged me to borrow it. 45 lbs got the job done well, buried to the fletches. though it was only 5 paces .....still zipping well, but tuned arrows are what its all about for penetration really with a long bow, with no real shelf cut in, tons of archers paradox going on.
google "mike houston archers paradox pictures" if interested, his wife is a talented photographer and they have some awesome pics of it. their stuff is in primitive archer magazine all the time.