This may be obvious to some but I don't see it mentioned too often, and that is how does the growing conditions affect how bow wood performs. Things like: Drainage, soil composition, wind, slope, sunlight, etc. I have my own opinions but I'm not sure if they're specific to the species of trees I cut or where I am geographically... and lets face it, I don't have near the amount of experience as a lot of people on this site.
Here's an example though. I cut and have a a bit of hackberry drying, some of it cut on a wet but well drained north facing slope and others cut on more bottomland soil. The first has a distinctly different appearance than the second, it's heavier and has more luster when sanded and even though both have very similar RPI, the first has less earlywood. I've also had osage and walnut cut on the same slope that tends to be on the denser side compared to other wood i've used.
I guess my question is: 1. have other people noticed the same thing? Some land just produces better bow wood than others.
2. And if so, should we treat wood more on a tree to tree basis than on what species it is?