I read what you said, I didn't misinterpret anything you posted, just stating my experience for what it's worth. Like I said, and I have cut more than a couple hackberry trees down, as you and most people on here have I am sure, the thicker ringed hackberry most of the time has almost always been lighter and took more set for me. The thinner ringed hackberry has always been denser and took less set, and made the better bows. I understand about early growth and the ratio of the early growth to late growth. Like I stated above most of the thicker ringed hackberry, or mulberry, or most woods I have cut with thicker rings for that matter, has had a good amount of early wood. A lot of the thinner ringed woods I have cut, the rings have been too thin to see much early wood at all if any, this has been the case a good amount of times with hackberry mulberry and osage, which are the main woods I cut and harvest myself. There has probably been the exception a couple times, but for the most part this is the case. I have made a good couple shorter stressed hackberry bows out of this better hackberry, and posted the bows on here as well. I don't heat treat, as you probably know, and I have not ended up with excessive set by any means, and I sure would not call it crappy bow wood. So, if you are making a broad blanket statement as it seemed to me that all thin ringed hackberry will be crappy bow wood, than yes I guess I do disagree with you, but I was by no means intentionally trying to step into some nasty argument, if there is any possibility that that might be where this is heading. It is understandable that, with wood having such a broad spectrum of variance from region to region, tree to tree, piece to piece, that not all of our experiences are going to be the same. That is why I posted this as a follow up:
It just seems like wood is so funny, it never wants to stick to a single rule or guide line and always has to break the rules.
Anyway, peace love and all the best brother, and I mean that.