as has been illustrated in a couple of comments above, it's an easy experiment to try yourself.
The nearest I've found to Aspen is yellow poplar (tulipwood) or Lombardi poplar. make a half inch shaft with horn reinforcement 2" long and fit a heavy war bodkin. taper the shaft from 3/8" from the nock until you get the desired balance point, just fore of the centre. I have goose feathers here that are 9 1/2" long, plenty long enough to make 7 1/2" triangular cut fletchings, I prefer to follow the grease line so they come out swine or hogs back.
Now go out and shoot it. does it appear slow enough for you to run alongside?
can you hit the modern clout distance of 180 Yards? If you can clear 220 yards then there can be no doubt you would have made muster.
If not, then why not? is it your technique? is your bow of the requisite draw weight to get the arrow there?
I have an 80LB bow here that when I shot an Ash shaft at a 50 gallon oil drum, the arrow merely bounced off. the same arrow pierced the crimped end of the drum (bum shot). remember that is a double crimp, 6 thicknesses) but I was using a 110LB bow from the same distance 30 yards.
When I was training into becoming a computer network engineer, a lecturer was commenting on Norton security products "there are them that can and there are them that write books" at that time, it seemed Norton were producing as many books as there were new security threats