A kitchen scale that weighs in grams will cost you about $20 US....cheaper than the cost of one stave! And it can really do you a good turn by telling you when the wood is about at equilibrium with your local conditions. Badger ain't steering you wrong!
Your local conditions might vary from season to season, too. In that way, you never really are out of the woods, so keep the back sealed like Pat B mentioned. Where I am, in South Dakota, I just KNOW that osage is going to check on me no matter how long someone has had the stave up curing in their rafters. Period. Known fact. Non negotiable.
I still get checks across the backs of staves I am working on, because of my attention deficit issues, I can forget details. Almost so bad I can walk out of the house without pants. Fortunately our climate is cold enough that the draft gives me a clue before I get too far down the driveway. What was I talking about? Oh yeah, drying checks.
Now that your piece of wood is down close to final dimensions, keep weighing weekly until you have 3 wks without change. Remember, one gram is a whole cubic centimeter of water! That is a fair amount when distributed thru a bow sized stave! But once it is stable, make double sure your back is sealed tight and the ends are tighter, and put the stave in your car while it is parked in the sun. That will help push the last of the moisture out of the stave. A week of that and you might lose a few more grams of water and at that point I think you might be ok to try a heat gun to make corrections. If not, and you get horrible cracks and checks, disregard what I have said.
Good luck, post pics, wear pants.