recycling a turkey and making it fly again

Ron Kulas

Active Member
I enjoy making my own arrows. Ive been making them for more than 35 years. While I enjoy compounds and recurves,, I also make my own longbows and my own broadheads to hunt with. Likewise I make my own cedar arrows. I took a few pictures of the last batch I am working on. This is not the ONLY way to make arrows. Its just one way. There is more than one way to skin a cat and while I love cats, I can’t eat a whole one by myself but I digress.

I save the wings from the birds we kill so we can make them fly again.

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I like to use the primary feathers but I also use the secondary feathers if they seem fitting for the purpose.

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I trim away both ends that are less than useful.

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Turkeys are dirty, smelly, oily birds so the feathers need a bath in warm soapy water

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Even though this turkey died once, Its gonna get dyed again. This time red but sometimes green or yellow, etc. I use RIT dye, really hot water and a little vinegar.

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After a rinse and air drying.

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Lots of folks use a razor knife to split their feathers and I have done it that way for years but I find a 14 tooth very thin bandsaw blade offers more control and is a bit easier/safer.

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I fabricated a holder that allows me to grind/sand the base and sides of the feathers. Nothing fancy but it works.

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Then a trip on the drill press against a sanding drum with a wood spacer slightly larger in Diameter than the drum to allow for consistent spacing.

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I don’t chop my feathers although that is a perfectly fine method to employ. I tend to burn my feathers either in advance of fletching using a simple clamp I made from office supplies and a red hot wire.

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Or I burn them after fletching (also using a hot wire)

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I like to dip and crest my cedars in colors that match the feathers.

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I have a few fletching jigs that date back pretty far but for a bit more helical I use this newer Bohning jig.

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Here is another batch.

newcedars9996.jpg


Couple that with a homemade broadhead

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And a homemade bow and it makes for one very satisfying way to pass the time and a way to increase the level of satisfaction and accomplishment as a bowhunter when you take game with a homemade bow and homemade arrows tipped with homemade broadheads. A bowhunter seeks to bring more of himself to the task rather than seeking for ways to eliminate the things bowhunters to. The joy is in the doing. This is my last bear with all homemade primitive trad.

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I don’t chop my feathers although that is a perfectly fine method to employ. I tend to burn my feathers either in advance of fletching using a simple clamp I made from office supplies and a red hot wire.

fletch97_zpsoz7inlak.jpg


Or I burn them after fletching (also using a hot wire)

newcedars9994.jpg


fletch98_zpsjzzajyyy.jpg


I like to dip and crest my cedars in colors that match the feathers.

fletch99_zpsekyv0jx3.jpg


I have a few fletching jigs that date back pretty far but for a bit more helical I use this newer Bohning jig.

fletch991_zpslrhahoww.jpg


fletch992_zps5srudrw3.jpg


Here is another batch.

newcedars9996.jpg


Couple that with a homemade broadhead

e8fr3OY.jpg


rNKYeoe.jpg


And a homemade bow and it makes for one very satisfying way to pass the time and a way to increase the level of satisfaction and accomplishment as a bowhunter when you take game with a homemade bow and homemade arrows tipped with homemade broadheads. A bowhunter seeks to bring more of himself to the task rather than seeking for ways to eliminate the things bowhunters to. The joy is in the doing. This is my last bear with all homemade primitive trad.

3z9PFN7.jpg
that's some great talent. This guy knows how to make his own equipment!
 
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