Weapons used in full contact medieval sports require frequent inspections and maintenance, regardless if their construction is rattan, wood or steel. I fight in a rattan-based combat sport (SCA) and my favorite weapon requires an overhaul.
The initial construction and modification of this poleaxe can be found on the Armour Archive at:
New poleaxe, thanks to this forumSCA weapons should be carefully inspected before each combat, re-foamed annually and completely rebuilt as necessary. The foam used to achieve “1/2 inch of progressive give” typically breaks down due to age, water saturation and repeated compression on your opponent’s body parts.
The foam on this weapon wears out quickly as it’s sandwiched between a half-round piece of rattan “blade” (aka a clacker) and the leather main body. The head had also worked itself loose (wobbly) and needed to be strengthened. I’m surprised the haft is still in great condition and not showing any mushy spots. This is probably due to the fact that it’s been shaped from a 2” diameter piece of rattan down to a 1 ½” octagon cross section and due to the fact I try my best to avoid hafting my opponents.
The first step is to strip all the plasti-dip, duct tape and strapping tape from the weapon. This is a gigantic, time consuming pain.