This a display of a Plains Indian archery set I made. The bow is a double-curved piece of Osage Orange wood backed with elk sinew. The string is woven sinew also. The arrows are river cane shafts with wild turkey fletching and flint points.
I have been building bows since 1998. Like most archers, I started out using compound bows, but I found traditional archery much more of a challenge. Since I am left-handed, I had difficulty finding bows that suited me, so I began to build bows. I started with fiberglass kits, and I made two or three very nice bows, but I felt that almost anything that I sandwiched between two pieces of fiberglass would shoot well. I wanted to experience the thrill of using actual trees and bamboo and animal sinew and horn to make bows the old fashioned way. I do use modern glues, strings and machines to make these bows, and many of them are perhaps too fancy for mere survival. Nonetheless, they are effective weapons that shoot fast. They are also quiet and easy to shoot. I hope you enjoy looking at them, and if you would like to know more about them, send me an email.
Dan's bows can now be purchased through the site Primitive Pathways.
Click here to be taken to the Dan Spier collection.
This a display of a Plains Indian archery set I made. The bow is a double-curved piece of Osage Orange wood backed with elk sinew. The string is woven sinew also. The arrows are river cane shafts with wild turkey fletching and flint points.