I read somewhere that Eucalyptus tends to chrysal badly - have other people experienced this?
eucalyptus is not one tree but a category of trees that produce eucalyptus oil in the leaves. most 'Gum' trees here in oz are eucalypts. some of them are fast growing crap wood, some are slow growing excellent wood (for bows and other uses), further to this the conditions an individual tree grows in will have an impact on it's quality. a tree that has had good contions will not produce a quality wood like a tree that has had harder conditions.
we have a species here called spotted gum. if it grows on one side of the range (sea side) we don't use it, infact it's not even harvested. if it grows on the other side of the range it is harvested and used for all number of building uses and bows.
there is also a lot of african mahogany growing around me. it is apparently no good for bows. the small amounts i'bve used (not for bows or bow limbs) has been hard but brittle and snaps when you look at it.
if i was you i'd be looking for a slow growing tree in hard conditions. find a good branch or trunk for a stave, roughing it out to floor tillered. paint the back and ends to stop it cracking while it drys and chuck it in an air conditioned room for a month or until it stops looing weight and give that a go.