The log I talked about above seemed solid enough and was still very hard but the tensile strength had been robbed.
When you find stiff spots like the one you are talking about that don't register wood removal its good reasons why you should exercise the limbs after each wood removal. This bow probably would have broke anyway if it is fungi but it may have happened sooner, before you put too much in to.
I have bought red oak boards from Lowe's, etc but I study them carefully. Wood that is suitable for building and hobby projects may not be good for bows if they weren't handled properly. I bought some hickory from a specialty lumber Co a few years back. They let me pick through their piles if I put every thing back as I found it. I got a very nice hickory board that was 10' long and was 8/4x 6" and it cost $30. I cut it into 6' and 4' pieces and cut a lot of backing strips and a few staves from the 6' piece and still have the 4' piece that I will cut to backing strips.
My point is, if you have a specialty lumber Co in your area see if they will let you pick through their stacks for desirable bow wood. These specialty lumber places seem to be more particular about where they get their wood and how they handle it. Pat