Air movement is also a big factor. Still air doesn't dry things. Moving air does. SteveB puts his staves in an old sleeping bag. Works very much like a plastic bag, just not as extreme. If the air ain't moving the humidity (from the stave) builds up around it, slowing the evaporation. You want to start with low evaporation (high RH, low temp and low air movement) and as the wood dries over weeks you want to move to high evaporation (low RH, higher temp and more air movement). Don't try to dry it too fast, it's going to take weeks, probably months, possibly a year depending on the species of wood. I started in this hobby last summer and I'm just now getting a couple of staves I can work. Waiting is tough.
Don