now now jdubya, cedar makes a nice arrow, you just have to leave them long and carry a tapper tool, fletch tight, a few points and a crack lighter. leave them long, that's the key. If you're lucky they may shoot better as you break them down. one tapper at a time...one tapper at a time.
Cane seems to be in great surplus and strong as all get out. all different kinds too. Dries quick, easy to straighten, and tough as all get out. probly some better than others, but if it is plentiful...
BUT, to do it right you should probly scrape the skin off it or nothing will stick to it and even fletching wraps will move.
Shoot shafts of osier are nice, heavy, cut big and scrape to size or cut at 3/8" and hope for the best. take a bit to dry. I'd say most shoot shafts w/ bark left on take more time to dry than cane. ? am I wrong?
Hazel is ok, light though, but pretty tough.
Most of my shoot shaft shooting has become mainly blunt point stumping and old targets. My deer hunting arrows are osier primitive arrows. Mainly for weight and that's what I was into at the time.
One thing I never hear about arrows that may save some checking in shoot shafts is to glue the ends of the shoots like you do a stave...to keep it from checking.
Those are the ones I've tried. My next batch may be ocean spray. I've collected quite a supply from two different sources.
Least favorite would probably be dowels. Might as well buy shafting if I'm using dowels. They have their place too though.
They all take time, dpgratz