Hello everyone who replied, sorry for the delay
this is probably dead now but anyway...
Joec123able: imagine if that were as your stave there, would be less bother to work on thats for sure!
George Tsoukalas: The wood in question is late summer cut shade grown hornbeam, slight twist and reflex but fine otherwise, the fissures are between 1 - 3 mm deep/wide so not much room for error if I do finally remove, but I really dont want to as its pristine at the moment and I would like to see how they hold up to tiller. Will try to remember photos when I approach the stave again. Its basically roughed out blank now, but still quite green..
TacticalFate: Will bear in mind the glue softening advice..
dbb: still green carpinus betulis, bloody hard, dense, interlocking grain -
For the moment while its curing I'm only using axe, very sharp, or the very used/weathered blades of 2 drawknives, a very sharp spokeshave set fine, and a coarse shinto rasp (this seems to deal with the "furring" that rasping green wood causes). The sharp blades tear if they are not honed really well and stropped, the axe is very good with the grain but will tear knots deeply if you dont consider the flow of it which can be really hard on the eye to ascertain, the "well used/weathered" drawknife works smoothly and semi wedge-like but only along where grain is "less interlocked" so to speak.
Speaking of tough wood - has anyone worked shade grown hawthorn? the "stave" i have is almost iron-like, nothing but a rasp will touch it :-/ its pitched and blunted all the tools I have used on it so far..
Thanks for reading and replying
H