Juvenile wood is the wood that forms in the first 10-20 rings from the pith. It is always forming, because even after mature wood starts forming near the base, there is always juvenile wood forming towards the apical meristem.
Juvenile wood is inferior to mature wood in ever aspect except some niche paper products. It has more lignin, lower density, less strength, higher tendency to form spiral grain, and more longitudinal shrinkage and warping due to the higher microfibril angle in the S2 layer of the cell wall (cellulose chains are at an angle, not straight up and down). Juvenile wood is a big problem in the wood industry, and I was curious how it has affected bow making and if anyone has any insight.
Usually in bow making this is not a problem since a lot of staves are split from older trees. A big reason I think is juvenile wood is associated with wood formation of the stem within the crown, which is associated with knots, and bowyers generally avoid knotty wood, and go for the knot free wood which is coincidently likely to be mature wood.
But I was thinking about this elm sapling I have drying, and sapling and branch bows in general (lots of juvenile wood in branches and compression wood as well, which has its own suite of negative effects) , which can quite likely be less than 10-20 years old.