Some of the best bamboo I ever backed a bow with was sold as "tonkin" bamboo by Mike Westavang, AKA Wingnut on the Trad Gang. Of course there is no such thing as tonkin bamboo big enough to back bows with. I suspect it was heat treated mosa, the back was dark brown, even had a little charcoal on the tips of the nodes.
Just curious Duke, where did you come up with that info you put out about tempering bamboo being a bad thing? There are plenty of videos on utube of classic Japanese bow makers heat tempering their bamboo, they have been doing it for hundreds if not a thousand years.
Your info on seasoning bamboo is way off as well, way out in left field. I don't know how much you have cut and seasoned yourself but I have cut and seasoned a bunch. I have made at least 50 bamboo backed osage bows. Cut the bamboo, knock the nodes out, let it sit for month in trunk form so the slats won't cup when they dry, split or cut out the slats, flatten the belly on a jointer or belt sander, throw it in the hot box for a couple of weeks and you are good to go. Seasoned for two years.......... no way.
Here is my last bamboo cutting haul, one of many,very many.
I have asked in the past for folk to not give untested opinions as if they are indeed a fact. If anyone has tempered bamboo and had a failure because of the tempering let us know about it. If anyone has "seasoned" bamboo for different periods of time for up to two years and has seen any recordable difference in performance, we want to know all about the changes you saw.
Like Sgt Joe Friday said "just the facts Mam, just the facts"